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Oxford, South East

What are dental implants? A Oxford patient's guide

If you're researching dental implants in Oxford, here is the plain-English version. An implant is a titanium (or ceramic) screw placed into your jawbone that acts as a replacement tooth root. A crown goes on top. The whole thing, done well, lasts decades.

How the process works in Oxford

Most Oxford implant practices follow the same protocol: consultation with 3D CT scan, surgical placement of the fixture, a 3–6 month healing period during which the bone fuses to the implant, then the fitting of the permanent crown. You wear a temporary tooth during the healing phase. Start-to-finish is usually 4–9 months. Some clinics offer same-day "teeth in a day" protocols (All-on-4) where appropriate — these compress the timeline but are not right for everyone.

What to check before booking in Oxford

Verify your chosen clinician on the GDC register (free, public, online). For implant work, look for postgraduate qualifications — a diploma or MSc in implantology, or ADI membership. A general dentist who did a weekend course is not the same thing as an experienced implantologist, and a competent Oxford clinic will tell you honestly which you are seeing.

How long implants last

Published survival rates for single-tooth implants are 94–97% at ten years and above 85% at twenty years in well-maintained patients. The failure modes are almost always predictable: gum disease around the implant (peri-implantitis), smoking, and uncontrolled diabetes. Properly-cared-for implants in Oxford last as long as they do anywhere else — decades.

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Read the full guide

This page gives Oxford-specific pricing and framing. The full canonical guide chapter (not local-specific) is at /guide/what-are-implants.

Other chapters for Oxford patients

General information for Oxford residents. Not clinical advice. Decisions about treatment should be made with a qualified clinician after a clinical assessment.