Dental Crown Cost in
Richmond, TX
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In This Article
A dental crown is one of the most common restorative procedures — and one of the most inconsistently priced. Fees for the same porcelain crown on the same tooth can range from $800 to $2,000+ across Richmond, TX practices, with most practices not publishing their fees at all. This guide covers what crowns actually cost in Richmond, what's driving that variation, and what you can do to pay less without compromising on quality.
What Dental Crowns Cost in Richmond, TX
Richmond-area crown fees vary significantly depending on the practice. Most local competitors don't publish prices — which means patients have no way to compare before committing to treatment. Best Dental publishes a flat $950 fee for all crown types, no material upcharges.
No hidden lab fees
and practice
Crown Type |
Best Dental |
Richmond Market |
|---|---|---|
Porcelain / ceramic crown |
$950 |
$1,000–$1,800 |
Zirconia crown (incl. BruxZir) |
$950 |
$1,000–$1,800 |
Porcelain-fused-to-metal (PFM) |
$950 |
$900–$1,500 |
Gold alloy crown |
$950 |
$1,000–$2,000 |
With 50% PPO insurance coverage |
~$475 |
$500–$1,000 |
The $950 flat fee at Best Dental applies regardless of which material is used — so choosing zirconia over PFM doesn't add to your bill. That's unusual in the Richmond market, where many practices charge a premium for higher-tier materials. For full clinical details on each material type and the cases each is best suited for, visit the dental crowns service page.
What Drives the Price — and What Doesn't
Crown pricing varies for reasons that have nothing to do with the quality of the restoration you receive. Understanding which factors actually matter helps you separate legitimate pricing differences from overhead markup.
Practice Location & Overhead
The largest driver of crown price variation in the Richmond area. Practices on high-traffic commercial corridors or in premium centers carry significantly higher rent and staff costs — all recovered through patient fees. Best Dental's location in Richmond keeps overhead low, and that difference flows directly to the patient fee.
Crown Material
Porcelain, zirconia, PFM, and gold have different lab costs — but the variation is smaller than most patients expect. At Best Dental, all materials are priced the same at $950. Some practices charge $200–$500 more for zirconia vs. PFM. This is a legitimate cost difference at those practices — but it's worth confirming before assuming material choice changes your bill.
General Dentist vs. Specialist
Prosthodontists (crown specialists) charge specialist-tier fees. For the vast majority of crown cases — a single damaged molar, post-root canal crown, implant crown — an experienced general dentist like Dr. Naderi produces the same outcome at a lower fee. Specialist referrals are warranted for complex multi-tooth reconstructions, not routine single crowns.
Dental Lab Quality
Crown quality is substantially determined by the lab that fabricates it. Lower-cost labs may produce crowns with less precise fit or shade accuracy, which affects longevity and appearance. Best Dental uses quality labs with consistent shade matching and fit standards — contributing to the 15+ year lifespans well-placed crowns achieve.
Pricing Transparency (or Lack Of)
Most Richmond practices don't publish crown fees — which means patients can't compare costs before booking a consultation. This information asymmetry allows practices to price based on perceived ability to pay rather than a consistent fee schedule. Best Dental publishes fees upfront at richmondtxdentists.com/pricing — no consultation required.
What Doesn't Change the Price
The clinical procedure for placing a crown is the same at every practice. The tooth is prepared, an impression is taken, a temporary crown is placed, and the permanent crown is delivered and cemented. A $1,800 crown from a Galleria-area practice follows the same sequence as a $950 crown at Best Dental — the extra $850 is overhead, not clinical value.
What Insurance Covers for Dental Crowns in Richmond
Dental insurance coverage for crowns is one of the most misunderstood areas of dental benefits. Here's how it actually works — and how to maximize what your plan pays.
The 50% major restorative benefit
Most PPO dental plans classify crowns as "major restorative services" — covered at 50% after your annual deductible is met. At Best Dental's $950 fee, 50% coverage means approximately $475 out-of-pocket per crown. At a practice charging $1,500 for the same crown, 50% coverage means $750 out-of-pocket. The lower base fee produces a lower patient share — even with identical insurance coverage percentages.
Annual maximum and timing strategy
Most PPO plans carry an annual maximum of $1,000–$2,000. If you need two crowns, you may exhaust your annual maximum on the first one depending on your plan. Ask Best Dental to phase crowns across calendar years — one in December, one in January — to apply two separate annual maximums to the same total treatment, potentially cutting your out-of-pocket in half.
Pre-authorization before treatment
For any crown over $500, request that Best Dental submit a pre-authorization to your insurer before the procedure. This gives you written confirmation of exactly what your plan will pay — before you're in the chair, not after. Without pre-authorization, insurance decisions are made after treatment when you have no leverage. Best Dental submits pre-authorizations as standard practice before major restorative work.
5 Ways to Pay Less for a Crown in Richmond
Choose a Practice That Publishes Its Fee
The most basic step — and the one most patients skip. Before booking any crown consultation in Richmond, call and ask: "What is your fee for a porcelain crown, all-in?" If the answer involves a range without specifics, or requires an exam before a number is given, that practice prices based on individual circumstances. Best Dental's answer is $950 — the same for every patient, every material, every case. See the full pricing page to confirm before your first appointment.
Use Your HSA or FSA Funds
Dental crowns are IRS-eligible expenses for Health Savings Accounts and Flexible Spending Accounts. Paying for your crown with pre-tax HSA or FSA dollars reduces the effective cost by your marginal tax rate. A patient in the 22% federal bracket paying the $475 patient share (after 50% insurance) from HSA funds effectively pays $370 in gross earnings — a $105 savings on the same crown with no additional discounts. If you have FSA funds expiring at year-end, crowns are one of the best eligible uses before the forfeiture deadline.
Time Your Treatment Around Your Benefit Year
Dental insurance annual maximums reset January 1. If you need two crowns and your plan has a $1,500 annual maximum, scheduling one crown in late December and one in early January applies two separate maximums to the same treatment sequence — potentially saving $500–$750 vs. having both done in the same calendar year. Best Dental's treatment coordinators help plan this specifically for patients with multi-crown cases.
Use In-House 0% Financing for the Patient Portion
After insurance, a crown at Best Dental costs approximately $475 out-of-pocket. That's manageable in a single payment for many patients — but if timing is tight, Best Dental's in-house 0% payment plan requires only a $250 down payment and spreads the remaining balance over 3–6 months with no interest. There's no credit check and no application — it's available to all patients immediately. See Best Dental's affordable dental care options for the full breakdown of financing available.
Don't Wait — Delay Turns Crowns Into More Expensive Treatment
A tooth that needs a crown but doesn't get one continues to deteriorate. A cracked tooth that could have been crowned for $950 may fracture below the gumline — requiring extraction ($250) plus bone grafting ($500) plus an implant ($1,995) for a total of $2,745. Deferring a $950 crown can cost $1,795 in additional treatment from the same tooth. The cheapest crown is always the one placed before the tooth gets worse.
Crown vs. Extraction — the Real Cost Comparison
When patients find out a crown costs $950, the immediate thought is often "why not just pull it?" It's worth running the actual numbers — because extraction is almost never cheaper over a 10-year horizon.
Option |
Upfront Cost at Best Dental |
10-Year Total Cost |
|---|---|---|
Crown — save the tooth |
$950 |
$950 (no replacement needed) |
Extraction + dental implant |
$250 + $1,995 = $2,245 |
$2,245–$2,745 with graft |
Extraction + dental bridge |
$250 + $2,500–$3,500 |
May need replacement at 10–15 yrs |
Extraction + no replacement |
$250 |
Adjacent teeth drift; bone loss; bite issues compound over time |
Saving a tooth with a $950 crown is the most cost-effective option in nearly every case — and preserves natural tooth structure, bite function, and jawbone density that tooth loss progressively erodes. The exceptions are teeth with insufficient remaining structure to support a crown, or teeth with poor long-term prognosis regardless of crown placement. Dr. Naderi assesses this honestly at your consultation — recommending extraction only when crown placement wouldn't meaningfully extend the tooth's useful life.
$950 crowns in Richmond, TX. Published pricing. No surprises.
Best Dental at 22377 Bellaire Blvd, Richmond, TX. Insurance verified before treatment. 0% in-house financing. Book your consultation or call to get your benefits confirmed before you arrive.
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$950 Dental Crowns in Richmond, TX
Flat fee — all materials. Insurance verified before treatment. 0% financing with no credit check. Best Dental at 22377 Bellaire Blvd, Richmond, TX 77407.
Best Dental · 22377 Bellaire Blvd, Ste 400, Richmond, TX 77407


