A single missing tooth has two good replacement options: a dental implant (one implant + one crown) or a traditional 3-unit bridge (two crowns on the neighboring teeth supporting a fake tooth between them). In 2026, implants are almost always the better long-term choice — but bridges are not obsolete.

What a 3-Unit Bridge Actually Requires

A traditional bridge requires reducing (grinding down) both neighboring teeth to fit crowns over them. Even when those teeth are perfectly healthy, significant enamel and dentin must be removed. Those teeth are now permanently dependent on the bridge; if the bridge fails in 10-15 years, both supporting teeth are often lost with it.

What a Single Implant Requires

A single implant replaces only the missing tooth. Adjacent teeth are untouched. The implant integrates with the jawbone, preserving bone that would otherwise shrink over years. A single crown attaches to the implant. The total footprint of intervention is limited to the site of the missing tooth.

Long-Term Comparison

Cost Comparison

The bridge looks cheaper initially. Over a 30-year horizon, the implant is typically cheaper because the bridge needs to be replaced 1-2 times and may take supporting teeth with it.

When a Bridge Is Still the Right Answer

When an Implant Is Clearly Right

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