Composite dental bonding costs $100 to $600 per tooth for spot repairs and $250 to $1,500 per tooth for a full composite veneer, at 2026 U.S. prices. It’s the least expensive way dentistry can change a tooth’s shape — done in a single visit, usually with no drilling of healthy enamel and no dental lab involved.
“Composite” refers to the tooth-colored resin used — the same material as a white filling, sculpted onto the visible tooth and hardened with a curing light. This guide covers what it costs by application, how it stacks up against porcelain, and how to make it last.
Composite bonding prices by application
| Application | Cost per tooth | What it is |
|---|---|---|
| Small chip repair | $100 – $300 | Fixing a chipped edge or corner |
| Gap closure (per tooth) | $200 – $500 | Usually two teeth involved in one gap |
| Reshaping / worn edge rebuild | $250 – $600 | Restoring length or shape |
| Full composite veneer | $250 – $1,500 | Resin covering the entire front face |
| Full front-teeth makeover (6–8 teeth) | $1,500 – $8,000 | Composite veneers across the smile line |
Composite is priced by surface area and artistry, not material cost — the resin itself is a few dollars. A quick molar patch is fast functional work; an invisible front-tooth rebuild that matches enamel’s translucency is freehand sculpture, and the fee reflects the dentist’s cosmetic skill.
Composite vs. porcelain: the real comparison
This is the decision most people are actually weighing. Both are covered in depth in our veneers cost guide; here’s the head-to-head:
| Composite bonding | Porcelain veneer | |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per tooth | $250 – $1,500 | $925 – $2,500 |
| Visits | 1 | 2 – 3 |
| Made | Sculpted in your mouth | Custom-made in a lab |
| Tooth removed | Little to none | Thin enamel layer |
| Lifespan | 4 – 8 years | 10 – 15+ years |
| Staining | Gradual | Highly resistant |
| Repairable | Easily & cheaply | Usually requires remake |
| Reversible | Often yes | No |
The honest framing: composite wins on cost, speed, and conservation of your tooth; porcelain wins on longevity and stain resistance. For a single chipped tooth, someone on a budget, or anyone who wants to keep options open, composite is frequently the right first move — and because it removes little or no enamel, you can upgrade to porcelain years later with nothing lost.
What makes it cost more or less
- Which tooth. Front-and-center teeth cost more than back teeth for identical repairs — higher color-matching and finishing demands.
- The dentist’s cosmetic focus. Cosmetic-oriented practices charge more, and for visible front teeth their portfolio quality genuinely matters. For a back-tooth chip, any competent general dentist is fine at standard prices.
- Region. Coastal metro pricing runs 30–60% above the national middle, as with all dentistry.
- Whether decay is involved. If the “chip” includes decay, it’s billed as a filling (similar price, but insurance-covered) — worth clarifying, since it changes who pays.
When insurance helps
Same material, but the reason decides coverage:
- Restorative bonding (repairing a tooth broken by trauma or decay, covering an exposed sensitive root) is typically covered like a filling — around 50–80% after deductible.
- Cosmetic bonding (closing a gap, reshaping healthy teeth, composite veneers) is an aesthetic choice and not covered.
For a chipped edge that’s both structural and cosmetic, ask the office before treatment: “Will this be billed as a restoration, and what does my plan pay?” HSA/FSA funds apply to restorative bonding but generally not to purely cosmetic work.
Making composite last (and cost less over time)
- Whiten first, bond second. Composite is color-matched to your teeth as they are and won’t lighten later — so whiten, wait two weeks, then bond to the new shade. Doing it backward means paying twice.
- Bundle small repairs into one visit — much of the fee is setup and finishing time, so three repairs in one appointment usually cost less than three separate visits.
- Protect the edges. Nails, ice, and packaging chip bonding; a night guard helps if you grind. This free habit change is the best cost-per-year lever composite has.
- Budget for refresh, not replacement. Because composite is cheaply repairable, a small annual touch-up beats waiting for a full failure.
The bottom line
Composite bonding is the value option in cosmetic dentistry: cheapest, fastest, most conservative, and endlessly repairable — at the cost of a shorter lifespan and eventual staining. It’s the right tool for chips, small gaps, single-tooth fixes, and budget-conscious smile improvements. When you need many front teeth changed permanently and want maximum longevity, porcelain veneers justify their premium. For the broader repair-vs-cosmetic picture and insurance details, see our main tooth bonding cost guide.