Invisalign Express costs $1,800 to $3,500 in the United States in 2026 — roughly half the price of full Invisalign — by limiting treatment to up to 7 aligner sets, or about 3–4 months of wear.
For the right case (small shifts, minor crowding, post-braces relapse), Express is the best-value product in the Invisalign lineup. For the wrong case, it’s a cheaper program that ends before your teeth do. This guide covers real prices, exactly who qualifies, and the contract questions that protect the savings.
The Invisalign tiers, priced
| Tier | Aligner sets | Typical cost | Typical case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Express | up to 7 | $1,800 – $3,500 | Minor crowding/spacing, relapse, small rotations |
| Lite | up to 14 | $3,000 – $4,500 | Mild-to-moderate front-teeth corrections |
| Comprehensive (“Full”) | as needed | $4,500 – $8,000 | Moderate-to-complex cases, bite work |
(Some providers also offer Express 5 — five aligners for the tiniest touch-ups — around $1,500–$2,500.)
All tiers use identical aligner material, the same scanning, and the same lab. What you’re buying at each level is the amount of planned tooth movement plus the provider’s monitoring time — which is why a case that genuinely fits in 7 aligners shouldn’t be paying Comprehensive prices.
Who actually qualifies for Express
The honest screening list — Express works when all of these hold:
- The problem is cosmetic-front-teeth, not bite. Upper and lower front teeth, visible when smiling. Molars and bite correction (overbite, crossbite) need bigger programs.
- Total movement is small — roughly up to 2–3 mm of crowding or spacing, or mild rotations of narrow front teeth.
- The classic profile: orthodontic relapse. You had braces as a teenager, the retainer drawer won, and 10 years later the lower front teeth crowd. This is the single most common Express case and its best fit.
- You’ll wear them 22 hours a day. Short programs have zero slack for casual wear.
If a scan shows your case needs 9–10 aligners, expect a Lite quote — that’s honest practice, not upselling. The suspicious pattern is the reverse: a complex case squeezed into Express to win you on price, finishing “80% corrected” with an offer to continue for more money. Ask directly: “If we’re not at the goal after aligner 7, what happens and what does it cost?”
What’s in the price — the Express-specific checklist
Express contracts differ from Comprehensive ones in exactly the places that matter:
- Refinements. Comprehensive packages typically include additional aligner rounds; Express packages often include one or none. Get the refinement policy in writing — it’s the difference between a fixed price and an open-ended one.
- Retainers — almost always extra. Essix-style retainers run $100–$300 per arch; Vivera multi-set packages $400–$1,000. Since retainers are non-negotiable after any aligner treatment (relapse is what brought most Express patients here in the first place), put them in your budget from day one.
- Records and attachments. Scans/X-rays ($100–$500 if unbundled) and any attachments should be named in the quote.
Paying less — same rules, smaller numbers
The full debt-free playbook from our Invisalign guide applies, condensed for Express-sized budgets:
- Compare 2–3 providers — Express quotes for the same case commonly spread $800+, and consults are free.
- General dentists often price Express lower than orthodontists — and minor cosmetic alignment is well within a trained general dentist’s scope. For anything touching the bite, prefer the orthodontist.
- Insurance with ortho benefits typically covers Express like any orthodontics (25–50% up to the lifetime max) — but if your lifetime ortho benefit is, say, $2,000, using it on a $2,500 Express case consumes it entirely; worth a thought if bigger treatment might ever follow.
- Pay-in-full discounts (3–7%) and HSA/FSA funds apply as always. If installments, in-house 0% splits only.
- Ask about aligner alternatives at the same office. Many practices carry cheaper minor-correction aligner systems (in-house clear aligners, other brands) at $1,200–$2,500 — for a 5-aligner case, brand choice matters far less than the doctor supervising it.
Express vs. doing nothing vs. doing it right
The three realistic outcomes for a minor-shift case:
| Path | Cost | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Wait (“it’s minor”) | $0 | Front-teeth crowding slowly worsens with age — the case grows out of Express range |
| Express now + retainers forever | $1,900 – $4,000 all-in | Corrected in ~3–4 months, held permanently |
| Comprehensive later | $4,500 – $8,000 | Same end result, double the price, 12+ months |
That middle row is the Express value proposition in one line: small cases are cheap precisely because they’re still small. If your case qualifies today, it’s the cheapest it will ever be.
Curious what results to expect before committing? Our Invisalign before & after guide walks through realistic outcomes by case type — including the relapse cases Express was built for.