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Why Skipping Your $99 Cleaning Could Cost You $3,000 Later

A $99 cleaning every six months feels like an easy thing to push to next month. Then next month becomes next year. Then next year becomes the bill nobody wants. Here is the math nobody warns you about.

There is a thing that happens in our chair almost every week. A new patient walks in with severe pain. They have not been to a dentist in two, three, sometimes five years. They show me a tooth that hurts. The X-ray shows a story. The story is almost always the same. A cavity that was small two years ago has eaten through the enamel, reached the nerve, and now needs a root canal, a crown, or an extraction. The number on their treatment plan is somewhere between $1,500 and $5,000.

And almost every time, we have the same conversation. They ask how this got so bad so fast. The answer is that it did not get bad fast. It got bad slowly, over years, while no one was looking. A $99 cleaning two years ago would have caught it. A $99 cleaning a year ago would have still caught it. The cleaning that did not happen is the reason we are now talking about a $3,000 treatment plan.

This article is the math behind that. Not a guilt trip. Just the actual numbers, the actual cost ladder, and what each step costs at our office in real dollars. Read it once. Then decide whether the cleaning you have been putting off is worth booking.

01.What a $99 Cleaning Actually Does

A standard cleaning takes about 45 minutes. The hygienist does three things. First, scaling. That is the scraping you hear. Plaque turns into tartar within 24 to 72 hours, and tartar cannot be brushed off. It can only be scraped off with a metal scaler or an ultrasonic tool. Most patients have some tartar by the six-month mark, even with great brushing. That is normal. That is what cleanings exist for.

Second, polishing. A gritty paste smooths the tooth surface and removes surface stains from coffee, wine, and tea. This makes it harder for bacteria to stick to the tooth in the first place. Third, the exam. The dentist looks at every tooth, takes X-rays once a year, checks the gums for early signs of periodontal disease, and screens the soft tissue for oral cancer.

That last part is the part most patients underestimate. Cleanings are not really about the cleaning. They are about the exam that comes with the cleaning. Cavities at the enamel stage are invisible to you. They show up on an X-ray as faint shadows. We catch them, fill them, and the tooth never escalates.

"The cheapest dental work in the world is the work you never need because we caught the problem at the cleaning."

- Dr. Jasmine Naderi, DDS, Best Dental

02.The Cost Ladder. Step by Step.

When a small problem is not caught, it does not stay small. It progresses through predictable stages, and each stage is more expensive than the last. Here is what that ladder looks like in real numbers, using the published flat rates at our Richmond office.

The Cost of Waiting. By Stage.

Same tooth. Different timelines. Real flat-rate prices.

1
Routine Cleaning & Exam
The cavity is caught at the enamel stage. No drilling. No pain. Just a quick fill at the next visit.
$99
2
Small Filling
Cavity caught early. 30 minutes in the chair. The tooth is saved with minimal removal of structure.
$200-$300
3
Root Canal Therapy
Decay reached the nerve. The tooth is saved but most of it is now hollow. Pain before, relief after.
$750-$950
4
Crown to Cover the Tooth
A root canal tooth is brittle. It needs a crown to keep it from fracturing. This step is mandatory, not optional.
$950
5
Extraction (If It Is Too Far Gone)
If the tooth cannot be saved, it has to come out. Per tooth, all impaction types.
$250
6
Implant to Replace the Lost Tooth
Complete implant. Post, abutment, and crown. The full replacement after the tooth is lost.
$1,995

Total for the worst-case path. Root canal, crown, extraction, implant. $3,945. And that does not include the cost of any pain medication, the time off work for multiple appointments, or the months of waiting for the implant to integrate with the bone. The $99 cleaning at step one would have ended the entire chain at the start.

The dental cost ladder. $99 cleaning vs. $3,000+ in delayed treatment. Best Dental Richmond TX.

The cost ladder of skipping cleanings. $99 catches the problem early. $3,000+ is what happens when you wait.

03.The Two Outcomes. Side by Side.

Take the same patient with the same starting tooth. Show one outcome where they show up for cleanings every six months. Show the other where they push it off for two years.

Path A. Two Years of Cleanings.
$396 Total

4 cleanings at $99 each. Insurance often covers all of it.

The small cavity is caught at year one and filled for $250.

Realistic out-of-pocket. $250. The tooth is saved. No pain. No surgery. No follow-up appointments stretching out for months.

Path B. Two Years of Skipping.
$3,000+ Total

$0 saved over two years. The cavity grows from enamel to dentin to pulp.

By the time pain shows up, the tooth needs a root canal ($750-$950), a crown ($950), and possibly an implant ($1,995) if the tooth dies.

Realistic out-of-pocket. $1,500 to $3,000+ after insurance.

The cost difference is not even close. And this is just for one tooth. Most patients who delay cleanings for years end up with multiple problems. Two cavities turn into two root canals. A small gum issue turns into full periodontal disease that needs four quadrants of deep cleaning at $150 each.

04.Why Cavities Move So Fast Once They Start

A lot of patients ask the same thing at this stage. "If a cleaning would have caught it, how did it get bad in two years?" The answer is biology. Tooth decay is a chemical reaction. Bacteria in your mouth eat sugars and produce acid. The acid dissolves the mineral structure of your enamel. Once the enamel is breached, the dentin underneath is much softer and gets eaten through faster. Once the decay reaches the pulp (the nerve and blood supply), the tooth gets infected and starts to die.

Stage one to stage two can take a year. Stage two to stage three can take six months. Stage three to a tooth that needs to be pulled can take three months once the infection is active. The reason cleanings are scheduled every six months is that this is the right interval to catch decay at the enamel stage, before it speeds up.

The Gum Side of the Story

Decay is one path. Gum disease is the other. Both are caught at cleanings. Both get exponentially more expensive when ignored. Gingivitis (the early stage) is reversible with a regular cleaning and better home care. Periodontitis (the later stage) is not reversible. The bone around your teeth dissolves, the gums recede, the teeth get loose, and eventually the teeth are lost.

A cleaning at $99 reverses gingivitis. A four-quadrant deep cleaning for periodontitis is $600 ($150 per quadrant). Bone grafting and gum surgery for advanced cases run $2,000 to $5,000. Replacing teeth lost to periodontal disease can run $20,000 or more for a full upper or lower arch.

05.The Signals You Can Notice at Home

If you have been skipping cleanings, these are the signs that the cost ladder is already starting. Not all of them mean a major problem yet. But all of them mean it is time to book the next cleaning fast, before they progress.

🩸
Bleeding When You Brush
Healthy gums do not bleed. Bleeding is the earliest sign of gingivitis. Reversible at this stage if caught.
😮‍💨
Bad Breath That Will Not Quit
Persistent bad breath usually means bacteria is trapped below the gumline or in a hidden cavity.
🥶
Sensitivity to Hot or Cold
Sharp pain on contact with hot or cold drinks usually means decay has reached the dentin layer.
White or Brown Spots on Teeth
White spots are early demineralization. Brown spots are active decay. Both need attention.
📏
Receding Gums
If your teeth look longer than they used to, the gums are pulling back. That is bone loss.
Throbbing or Spontaneous Pain
If a tooth hurts on its own, with no trigger, the nerve is likely involved. Root canal territory.

06.The Insurance Math Most Patients Miss

Here is the part most patients do not realize. Most PPO dental insurance plans cover routine cleanings at 100% with no deductible, twice per year. The cleaning often costs you nothing out of pocket. Insurance companies cover preventive care fully because they know cleanings prevent expensive future claims. They are not doing it to be nice. They are doing it because the math works for them too.

If you have insurance and you have not been using your two yearly cleanings, you are leaving money on the table. Those benefits do not roll over. December 31st comes and they are gone. Then January 1st starts a new yearly maximum that you will probably also not use if the pattern continues.

If Insurance Covers Cleanings 100%, Why Do Patients Still Skip Them?

Time. A 45-minute appointment feels harder to schedule than the 10 minutes of brushing at home.
Anxiety. Some patients have had bad past experiences and avoid the chair as a result.
"Nothing hurts." Cavities at the enamel stage do not hurt. By the time it hurts, you are at stage three.
Cost confusion. Patients without insurance assume cleanings will be hundreds of dollars. The flat $99 rate fixes that.
Forgotten benefits. Patients who do have insurance often do not know their cleanings are fully covered.

07.What If It Has Already Been a Few Years?

A lot of patients reading this are in the situation already. It has been two, three, five years since a real cleaning. They are not sure what is going on in their mouth, and they are scared of what we will find. Here is the honest version of what happens at that first visit.

First, no judgment. We see this every week, and we do not lecture. The point of the visit is to figure out where you are, not to make you feel bad about how you got here. Second, we take X-rays and do an exam. We tell you exactly what we find, in plain language, with the costs written out before any treatment starts. Third, you decide what to do next. Sometimes it is just a cleaning and you are good. Sometimes it is a cleaning plus a couple of fillings. Sometimes it is bigger and we lay out a multi-visit plan with priorities and financing options.

The longer you wait, the bigger the gap between Path A and Path B gets. Patients who reset the cycle now spend less than patients who reset in another year. And patients who reset in another year spend less than patients who wait until pain forces them in. The cheapest version of the next chapter starts the day you call.

08.The Bottom Line

The case for the $99 cleaning is not a moral case. It is a math case. Two years of cleanings costs $396, often $0 with insurance. Two years of skipped cleanings can lead to $3,000 or more in restorative work. The price of preventive care is always lower than the price of fixing what preventive care would have caught.

If you are a patient who has been on schedule, keep going. You are doing it right and the math is working in your favor. If you are a patient who has been skipping, the right move is not to feel bad about it. The right move is to book the next appointment and reset the curve. The longer the gap, the more it eventually costs to close it.

Best Dental serves patients across our service areas with flat published pricing on every procedure mentioned in this article. Cleanings, fillings, root canals, crowns, extractions, and implants are all priced upfront before treatment starts. No surprise bills. No "we will tell you the cost after we are in the chair." If you have been putting off a cleaning, the next 45 minutes can save you the next $3,000.

Reset the Curve.
Book a $99 Cleaning Today.

Same-week appointments are usually available. We accept most PPO dental insurance plans, often covering cleanings at 100%. New patients welcome.

Book a Cleaning Call (281) 215-3065

09.Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it really cost to skip a dental cleaning?
A standard cleaning is around $99 at most practices, often fully covered by PPO insurance. Skipping cleanings for one to three years lets small problems grow into bigger ones. A small cavity that would have been a $200 to $300 filling can turn into a tooth that needs a $750 to $950 root canal, a $950 crown, or even a $1,995 implant if the tooth dies. The two-year skipped scenario most often lands in the $1,500 to $3,000+ range out of pocket after insurance.
Is a $99 cleaning really worth it if I brush and floss every day?
Yes. Brushing and flossing remove plaque, but they do not remove tartar (hardened mineral deposits). Tartar can only be removed by a dental hygienist using professional tools. Cleanings also include an exam and X-rays that catch small cavities, gum disease, and oral cancer signs early. Daily home care plus a professional cleaning every six months is the recommended combination, no matter how careful your home routine is.
What happens to a small cavity if I just leave it alone?
Small cavities do not stay small. Decay spreads through the tooth in stages. First, through the outer enamel. Then it reaches the dentin (the softer layer underneath). Then it hits the pulp (the nerve and blood supply inside the tooth). Once it reaches the pulp, the tooth needs a root canal to save it or extraction if it is too far gone. A cavity caught at the enamel stage is a $200 to $300 filling. A cavity that reaches the pulp is a $750 to $950 root canal plus a $950 crown.
Does dental insurance cover the cost of a cleaning?
Most PPO dental plans cover routine cleanings at 100% with no deductible, twice per year. This means the $99 cleaning often costs you nothing out of pocket if you have insurance. Insurance plans cover preventive care fully because cleanings prevent expensive future claims. The math works in your favor whether you have insurance or not.
How often should I get a dental cleaning?
Every six months is the standard for most patients. Patients with a history of gum disease, diabetes, smoking, or other risk factors may need cleanings every three to four months. Children and patients with healthy gums and no decay can usually stick with the twice-a-year schedule. The right interval is determined at your visit based on your specific situation.
It has been years since my last cleaning. Will I be judged at the visit?
No. Patients who have not been to a dentist in years are some of the most common new patients we see. The visit is about figuring out where you are now, not lecturing you about how you got here. We take X-rays, do an exam, and lay out a plan with prices in writing before any treatment starts. You decide what to do next.
Dr. Naderi

Author Dr. Naderi

Dr. Sonny Naderi is a fellowship-trained in oral surgery with over 20 years of experience and 25,000+ wisdom teeth extractions. His expertise in surgical dentistry, implants, and complex procedures, combined with a gentle, patient-focused approach, makes him one of Richmond's most trusted dental professionals.

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