Dupay Dentistry · 3376 Woods Edge Cir, Ste 101, Bonita Springs, FL 34134 (239) 498‑9666
Implant dentistry · Bonita Springs, FL

A missing tooth, handled by one dentist — start to finish

At most offices, an implant means three addresses: the dentist who found the problem, the surgeon who places the post, and back again for the crown. At Dupay Dentistry, Dr. Abbey Dupay — a Fellow of the International Congress of Oral Implantologists — manages your single or double implant in one office, with one set of records, and one person accountable for the result.

Why the one-office version matters for implants specifically

An implant is a system: the titanium post in the bone, the abutment, and the crown your bite actually touches. When different offices own different pieces, the coordination lives in referral letters. When one dentist plans the crown before placing the post, position, angle, bite, and esthetics are designed as one thing — and if anything ever needs adjusting, there's no "call the other office" in your future.

  • One treatment plan, in writing, before anything starts — including the honest total, not a per-component teaser price
  • The same dentist at every step: planning, placement, restoration, and the years of checkups afterward
  • Credentialed, specifically: Dr. Dupay holds a Fellowship with the International Congress of Oral Implantologists, one of the recognized credentials in implant dentistry
  • CareCredit financing accepted — and a real conversation about timing if budget is the constraint

Honest numbers, honest timeline

Cost: published national figures for a single-tooth implant generally run $3,000–$5,000 all-in — post, abutment, and crown together (sources: CareCredit, national dental cost surveys). Beware prices that sound dramatically lower: they usually describe one component of the three. Your written quote here covers the whole journey.

Timeline: after placement, the implant fuses with your bone over roughly three to six months before the final crown — biology sets that clock, and anyone promising to rush it is borrowing against your result. For seasonal residents: an October start typically finishes the same season. More winter-planning notes here.

The honest boundary: Dr. Dupay does single and double implants, meticulously. Full-arch "teeth in a day" reconstruction is a different discipline — if that's what your mouth truly needs, you'll hear it straight, with a trusted specialist's name, and this office stays your home for everything else.

Implant questions, answered

What does a single dental implant cost?
National published figures generally run $3,000–$5,000 all-in for a single tooth — implant, abutment, and crown. Your written quote here comes before treatment starts, and CareCredit financing is accepted. Be wary of teaser prices that quote only one component.
Is one dentist doing everything actually better for implants?
It removes the most common failure point: coordination. The dentist planning your crown is the same one placing the implant, so position, bite, and esthetics are designed together — and one office is accountable for the whole result.
Am I too old for an implant?
Age by itself is rarely the issue — bone quality and health history matter far more, and plenty of patients in their 70s and 80s do beautifully. An exam and a 3D look at your bone answer it properly.
What if I need more than one or two implants?
Dr. Dupay focuses on single and double implants done meticulously. Full-arch and full-mouth reconstruction genuinely belongs with a specialist team, and she'll tell you that honestly and connect you with one — while staying your home dentist for everything else.