Originally published: June 2026 | Reviewed by Dr. Michael Berglass
What Happens If a Dental Implant Fails? (And How to Avoid It)
A failed dental implant loosens, becomes infected, or fails to integrate with the jawbone — and the fix in most cases is removal, healing, and replacement with a new post.
Dental implants have a clinical success rate above 95% according to the American Academy of Implant Dentistry, which means failure occurs in fewer than 5 in 100 patients.
The fear of failure stops more people from getting implants than actual failure does — and most failures trace back to preventable causes that proper planning eliminates before surgery.
The fear of implant failure shouldn’t keep you in dentures or with a gap — Dr. Michael Berglass, D.D.S., a fellowship-trained implant dentist with 25 years of experience, screens for every risk factor before placement at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry. Call 561-736-1700.
A failing implant announces itself. The post feels mobile when you press your tongue against it. The gum around the implant turns red, swells, or bleeds without provocation. Pain returns weeks or months after surgery when the site should be painless.
A persistent metallic taste or visible pus at the gumline indicates active infection around the post.
The American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons categorizes implant failure into two windows. Early failure occurs within 3 to 6 months — before the post integrates with bone — and indicates that osseointegration has never been completed.
Late failure occurs after months or years of successful function and indicates that something disrupted an implant that had already integrated.
Dr. Berglass monitors every implant placed at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry through a structured follow-up protocol: post-surgical evaluation, 3-month radiographic confirmation of osseointegration, 6-month clearance for final restoration, and twice-yearly maintenance appointments. Each checkpoint catches early warning signs before they become failures.
If you’re ready to get started, call us now!
Early failure means the titanium post never bonded with the jawbone. The most common causes are identifiable before the patient enters surgery.
| Cause | Why the Implant Fails | How Pre-Surgical Screening Prevents It |
| Insufficient bone density | Post cannot anchor — micro-movement prevents osseointegration | CBCT scan maps bone volume; bone grafting builds density before placement |
| Active infection at the surgical site | Bacteria colonize the post surface before bone cells can attach | Gum disease was treated and resolved before implant placement |
| Surgical overheating | Excessive drill heat damages bone cells at the implant site | Fellowship-trained technique with irrigated, controlled-speed drilling protocol |
| Premature loading | Chewing force on the implant before osseointegration completes | Provisional crown designed to avoid direct occlusal contact during healing |
Dr. Berglass requires a 3D cone beam CT scan before placing any implant at the practice.
The scan maps jawbone density, nerve position, and sinus proximity in three dimensions — eliminating the guesswork that leads to placement errors in practices relying on two-dimensional panoramic X-rays alone.
Late failure disrupts an implant that had successfully integrated and functioned without issue. Peri-implantitis — bacterial infection of the tissue and bone surrounding an integrated implant — causes the majority of late failures.
Peri-implantitis destroys the bone supporting the post in the same way periodontal disease destroys bone around natural teeth.
Mechanical overload is the second most common cause of late failure. Patients who grind their teeth (bruxism) place lateral forces on the post that exceed the bone’s tolerance, causing micro-fractures at the bone-implant interface that loosen the post over months or years.
Crown fracture — a crack or break in the ceramic restoration sitting on top of the post — is not implant failure. The titanium post remains integrated. Dr. Berglass replaces the fractured crown without disturbing the post, and the patient retains the original implant.
Twice-yearly maintenance appointments at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry include probing depth measurements around each implant, radiographic assessment of bone level, and professional cleaning of the implant-gum interface. The aftercare protocol detects peri-implantitis at a reversible stage — before bone loss necessitates removal.
Smoking, uncontrolled diabetes, untreated periodontal disease, and compromised bone metabolism from osteoporosis or bisphosphonate medications represent the highest-risk factors for implant failure — and all are screenable at the consultation appointment before surgery is scheduled.
Smokers face elevated failure rates because nicotine constricts blood vessels in the jawbone, starving the surgical site of the oxygen and nutrients that drive osseointegration. Patients with uncontrolled diabetes face a 20% higher failure risk because elevated blood glucose impairs wound healing and immune response at the surgical site.
Patients with untreated periodontal disease carry bacterial loads that colonize the implant surface before bone cells can attach. Patients with osteoporosis or patients taking bisphosphonate medications face compromised bone metabolism that slows or prevents integration.
Dr. Berglass evaluates implant candidacy at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry by reviewing medical history, current medications, A1C levels for patients with diabetes, periodontal status, and CBCT bone density measurements.
Patients who present with manageable risk factors receive a modified treatment plan; those with unresolvable contraindications receive an honest recommendation for an alternative restoration.
If you’re ready to get started, call us now!
A failed implant is removed under local anesthesia in a procedure that takes 20 to 45 minutes. The extraction site heals over 8 to 12 weeks while the bone fills the socket left by the removed post.
Dr. Berglass places bone grafting material at the time of removal in most cases to preserve the site volume for a replacement implant.
A new implant can be placed in the same location once the grafted bone has matured — typically 3 to 6 months after removal.
The replacement implant follows the same osseointegration timeline as the original: 3 to 6 months of integration, confirmed by radiographic follow-up, followed by final crown fabrication and placement.
Replacement implant success rates match first-placement success rates once the cause of failure has been identified and resolved.
A patient whose first implant failed due to uncontrolled diabetes can succeed on the second attempt after achieving stable A1C levels. A patient whose first implant failed due to insufficient bone can succeed after grafting rebuilds the site to an adequate volume.
Knowing that failure is fixable — not final — changes the risk calculation entirely. Dr. Berglass at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry explains the removal, healing, and replacement timeline during the initial consultation so patients understand the full picture before placement. Book here or call 561-736-1700.
The gap between the 95%+ success rate and the fewer-than-5% failure rate comes down to decisions made before and after surgery.
Choose a fellowship-trained implant dentist who uses 3D CBCT imaging for surgical planning — not panoramic X-rays alone. Resolve any active periodontal disease before scheduling implant placement.
Disclose your full medical history, current medications, and smoking status so the dentist can adjust the treatment plan or identify contraindications. Follow the post-surgical aftercare protocol exactly as prescribed — including soft-food restrictions, oral hygiene modifications, and activity limitations during the healing window.
Commit to twice-yearly professional maintenance appointments after the final crown is placed. Peri-implantitis caught at the probing stage is treatable without implant removal. Peri-implantitis caught at the bone-loss stage often requires removal, grafting, and replacement — a $3,000 to $6,000 correction that a $150 maintenance appointment prevents.
The in-office savings plan at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry starts at $375/year and includes two free cleanings plus 20% off all dental work, making ongoing implant maintenance affordable for patients without dental insurance.
A $2,999 implant protected by proper screening and maintenance lasts a lifetime — Dr. Berglass at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry builds that protection into every treatment plan. Book here or call 561-736-1700.
How often do dental implants fail?
Dental implants carry a clinical success rate above 95% according to the American Academy of Implant Dentistry. Failure affects fewer than 5 in 100 patients, and most failures result from preventable causes identified through pre-surgical CBCT imaging and review of medical history.
Can a failed dental implant be replaced with a new one?
A failed implant can be removed, the site grafted, and allowed to heal over 3 to 6 months, and a new implant placed in the same location. Replacement success rates match first-placement rates when the original failure cause has been resolved.
Does smoking cause dental implants to fail?
Smokers face elevated implant failure rates because nicotine constricts jawbone blood vessels, reducing oxygen delivery during the osseointegration period. Smoking cessation before and after surgery significantly improves integration outcomes and long-term implant survival.
What is peri-implantitis, and how does it cause failure?
Peri-implantitis is a bacterial infection of the tissue and bone surrounding an integrated implant. The infection progressively destroys the supporting bone, loosening the post over months. Twice-yearly maintenance appointments detect peri-implantitis at the reversible stage before bone loss forces removal.
Can you get dental implants with diabetes?
Patients with controlled diabetes and stable A1C levels are candidates for implant placement. Uncontrolled diabetes elevates failure risk by approximately 20% because impaired wound healing and immune response interfere with osseointegration at the surgical site.
How do I know if my dental implant is failing?
A failing implant produces specific signs: post-mobility, gum swelling or bleeding around the implant site, returning pain weeks after surgery, a persistent metallic taste, or visible pus at the gumline. Any of these signs warrants immediate contact with the implant provider.
Does bone density affect dental implant success?
Insufficient jawbone density is a leading cause of early failure because the titanium post cannot achieve primary stability without adequate bone volume. A 3D CBCT scan measures density before surgery, and bone grafting rebuilds sites that fall below the placement threshold.
What does it cost to fix a failed dental implant?
Implant removal, bone grafting, healing, and replacement placement cost $3,000 to $6,000, depending on the extent of bone loss and grafting requirements. Twice-yearly maintenance appointments at $100 to $200 each prevent the late-failure conditions that lead to these costs.
Is implant failure covered by dental insurance in Florida? Most Florida dental insurance plans classify implant placement as non-essential and deny coverage for both initial placement and failure-related replacement procedures. The in-office savings plan at Boynton Implant & Cosmetic Dentistry provides 20% off all work at $375/year.
How long after surgery will I know if my implant failed?
Early failure occurs within 3 to 6 months before osseointegration is complete. Late failure can occur years after successful integration, typically from peri-implantitis or mechanical overload from bruxism. Radiographic confirmation of integration occurs at the 3-month follow-up.
Reason To Smile
Phone
Address
2415 Quantum Blvd
Boynton Beach, FL 3342
Office Hours
Mon - Thurs: 8:30AM-5PM
Fri: 8:30AM-1PM
Sat - Sun: Closed