Tooth Extraction Cost Wylie TX: 2026 Pricing Without Insurance

Knowing the exact tooth extraction cost in Wylie TX before you arrive eliminates the financial anxiety that makes an already stressful situation worse. Whether you need a straightforward extraction of a loose tooth or a surgical removal of a broken molar, the pricing at Willow Family Dentistry is transparent and presented before treatment begins. Dr. Esther Jeong doesn't start a procedure without the patient knowing exactly what it costs, what insurance covers (if applicable), and what financing is available for the remainder.
This guide breaks down 2026 DFW extraction pricing by type, explains the add-on costs that can change the total, and shows how patients without insurance manage the expense.
Tooth Extraction Cost Wylie TX: 2026 Price List
| Extraction Type | DFW Cost (2026) | When It Applies | Insurance (typical PPO) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple Extraction | $200-$400 | Tooth is fully erupted and can be grasped with forceps | 80% after deductible |
| Surgical Extraction | $300-$650 | Tooth is broken, below gumline, or requires bone removal | 50-80% after deductible |
| Wisdom Tooth (erupted) | $250-$450 | Wisdom tooth visible, accessible with standard technique | 50-80% after deductible |
| Wisdom Tooth (impacted, soft tissue) | $350-$550 | Covered by gum tissue, requires flap and tissue removal | 50% after deductible |
| Wisdom Tooth (impacted, bony) | $400-$600 | Embedded in jawbone, requires bone removal to access | 50% after deductible |
| All 4 Wisdom Teeth (surgical) | $1,200-$2,200 | All four removed in one appointment under sedation | 50% per tooth after deductible (annual max applies) |
These prices reflect the extraction procedure itself. Depending on your case, add-on services may apply. Dr. Jeong's team itemizes everything on the treatment plan before proceeding so the total is never a surprise.
What's Included vs What Costs Extra?
| Included in Extraction Fee | Costs Extra (If Needed) |
|---|---|
| Local anesthesia (numbing) | Bone graft ($300-$600) — preserves socket for future implant |
| The extraction procedure | Sedation: nitrous oxide ($75-$150) or oral sedation ($200-$400) |
| Post-op gauze and instructions | Diagnostic x-ray or iCAT scan ($25-$250 if not taken at recent exam) |
| Post-op follow-up visit (if needed) | Prescription medications (antibiotics, pain meds — filled at pharmacy) |
| Sutures (if placed) | Membrane for guided bone regeneration ($150-$300) |
The most common add-on is the bone graft. If you plan to replace the extracted tooth with a dental implant, Dr. Jeong places a bone graft into the empty socket at the time of extraction to preserve the ridge volume. According to the ADA, socket preservation grafting at the time of extraction produces significantly better bone quality for future implant placement than allowing the socket to heal empty. The graft adds $300-$600 to the procedure but saves months of additional bone grafting later.
What's the Difference Between Simple and Surgical Extraction?
The distinction matters for both cost and recovery, and Dr. Jeong determines which type applies based on the tooth's condition and position.
A simple extraction applies when the tooth is fully visible above the gumline, structurally intact enough to grasp with forceps, and has roots that aren't curved or fused to bone. Dr. Jeong loosens the tooth with an elevator instrument, grasps it with forceps, and removes it with a rocking motion. The procedure takes 5-15 minutes per tooth under local anesthesia. According to the Mayo Clinic, simple extractions are the most common type and have the fastest recovery (3-5 days of mild soreness).
A surgical extraction is needed when the tooth is broken at the gumline (no crown to grasp), partially or fully impacted (buried under gum tissue or bone), has curved or divergent roots that prevent straightforward removal, or is fused to the surrounding bone (ankylosis). Dr. Jeong makes an incision in the gum tissue, may remove a small amount of bone around the tooth, and may section (cut) the tooth into pieces for easier removal. Surgical extractions take 20-45 minutes and have a longer recovery (5-10 days). According to clinical data, surgical extractions cost more because they require more time, more instruments, and sometimes more complex post-operative management.
Dr. Jeong determines the extraction type from the x-ray or iCAT scan before the appointment. You know whether it's simple or surgical, and the corresponding cost, before the procedure begins.
Related: Full recovery timeline after extraction. → Tooth Extraction Recovery: Day-by-Day Timeline
How Much Does Sedation Add to the Cost?
Local anesthesia (numbing) is included in every extraction fee. Sedation is optional and separate for patients who want reduced anxiety or awareness during the procedure.
| Sedation Type | Add-On Cost | Level of Sedation |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrous oxide ("laughing gas") | $75-$150 | Mild relaxation; you're awake and responsive. Wears off in 5 minutes. |
| Oral sedation (pill) | $200-$400 | Moderate; you're drowsy and may not remember the procedure. Need a driver. |
| IV sedation | $400-$800 | Deep; you're essentially asleep. No memory. Need a driver + recovery time. |
For a single simple extraction, most patients do fine with just local anesthesia (no add-on cost). For all four wisdom teeth, especially impacted ones, Dr. Jeong typically recommends oral or IV sedation for patient comfort because the procedure takes 45-90 minutes and involves significant instrumentation. According to the ADA, the sedation choice should match the procedure complexity, patient anxiety level, and medical history, not be a default upcharge.
Related: Sedation options for anxious patients. → Dental Anxiety: Sedation Options at Willow
What If You Don't Have Insurance?
Approximately 34% of American adults have no dental insurance. In Texas, where employer dental coverage is optional, that percentage is even higher. Dr. Jeong's practice serves uninsured patients regularly and offers several cost-management strategies.
HSA/FSA accounts cover extractions with pre-tax dollars. For Texas patients (no state income tax), the federal tax savings reduce the out-of-pocket cost by 22-37%. A $400 surgical extraction paid with HSA funds effectively costs $252-$312 after tax savings.
Financing through Willow (CareCredit, Sunbit) offers 0% interest for 6-12 months on qualified applicants. Even a $2,000 four-wisdom-teeth extraction becomes $167-$333/month with no interest.
The in-house membership plan provides a percentage discount on extractions for enrolled patients. This option works well for patients who need the extraction plus follow-up replacement (implant or bridge), spreading the total investment across a membership that includes preventive care.
Dr. Jeong also discusses phased treatment for patients facing multiple extractions. Rather than extracting all teeth in one visit, phasing across two visits (and potentially two payment periods) reduces the per-visit financial burden while still completing the necessary treatment.
Should You Save the Tooth or Extract It?
Cost is only one factor in the extraction decision. Dr. Jeong's default is to save the natural tooth when the prognosis is favorable, because a root canal plus crown ($1,700-$3,000) preserves the tooth for decades, while extraction plus implant ($3,400-$6,500) costs more and takes longer. But when a tooth has a poor prognosis (vertical fracture, severe bone loss, non-restorable structure), extraction is the right call, and delaying it only increases cost and complication risk.
According to the ADA, the save-vs-extract decision should be based on long-term prognosis, not upfront cost alone. An extraction that costs $400 today may lead to a $4,000 implant later. A root canal that costs $1,500 today may save the tooth for 20 years. Dr. Jeong presents both pathways with transparent pricing and honest prognosis so the decision is informed.
What to Expect After an Extraction
Recovery depends on the extraction type. Simple extractions: 3-5 days of mild soreness, managed with ibuprofen 600mg alternating with acetaminophen 500mg. Surgical extractions: 5-10 days, with swelling peaking on days 2-3. All extractions: soft food diet for 3-7 days, no straws for 7 days (prevents dry socket), no smoking, and gentle salt water rinses starting 24 hours after. According to the Mayo Clinic, most patients return to normal activity within 1-3 days for simple extractions and 3-5 days for surgical.
Related: What to eat during recovery. → What to Eat After Dental Surgery: 14-Day Recovery Menu
Need a Tooth Extracted? Get the Cost First.
Dr. Jeong determines extraction type from your x-ray and presents the itemized cost, including any add-ons, before the procedure begins. Insurance verification included. No surprises.
Request an Appointment →Tooth extraction cost in Wylie TX ranges from $200 for a simple extraction to $2,200 for all four wisdom teeth with sedation. The type of extraction (simple vs surgical), sedation choice, and whether a bone graft is placed for future implant all determine the total. Dr. Jeong at Willow Family Dentistry itemizes every cost before treatment, offers HSA/FSA and 0% financing for uninsured patients, and performs all extractions in-house without referral. Call (972) 881-0715 to schedule.
Know Your Extraction Cost Before You Sit Down
X-ray, extraction type, sedation options, and bone graft decision — all presented with pricing before treatment begins. Insurance verified. Financing available.
Request an Appointment →Questions about extraction cost?
Call (972) 881-0715 →Dr. Esther B. Jeong, DDS
DDS · Willow Family Dentistry
Wylie family dentist with 15+ years of experience providing gentle, judgment-free dental care.
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(972) 881-0715
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Mon – Thu: 9am – 5pm
Fri: By Appointment
Location
1125 W FM 544, Wylie
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