Home / Sleep apnea / Cost
Straight talk about moneyWhat a sleep apnea oral appliance really costs
Nobody should discover the price of their treatment at the front desk. Here are the honest national numbers, what moves them up or down, and why the $50 mouthpiece at the pharmacy is a different product entirely.
The national picture
Published national figures put a custom-fabricated sleep appliance — including the dentist's fitting, adjustments, and follow-up — typically in the $1,800–$3,500 range, with the full published range running roughly $500 to $4,500 (sources: Sleep Foundation; dental sleep medicine practice surveys). The device itself is only part of that: you're paying for precise impressions, titration (the gradual adjustment that makes it actually work), and the follow-up that confirms it's treating your apnea, not just your snoring.
Insurance changes this math dramatically. Because appliances for diagnosed obstructive sleep apnea bill through medical insurance — and Medicare Part B covers them as durable medical equipment — many patients pay a fraction of the sticker figure. Read the coverage guide before you assume the worst.
Every mouth and every plan is different; the office will walk you through your specific numbers in writing, before anything is made. That's a standing promise.
Why not the $50 one from the pharmacy (or the internet)?
Boil-and-bite mouthpieces exist, and for simple snoring some people get some relief. But for obstructive sleep apnea they have three problems worth knowing about:
- Fit. They grip your teeth loosely and can't be precisely adjusted, so the jaw position that actually opens your airway is mostly luck.
- No follow-up. Nobody verifies it's treating your apnea. Quiet snoring with untreated apnea underneath is the worst outcome — it just hides the alarm bell.
- No coverage. Medical insurance and Medicare cover custom-fabricated appliances fitted by a provider, not over-the-counter devices.
If budget is the concern, say so plainly at your consultation — between medical insurance, Medicare, and CareCredit financing (which the practice accepts), there's usually a workable path.