Australian procedure prices are drawn from the Australian Dental Association fee survey 2024 and public patient cost data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW). Vietnam prices reflect Picasso Dental Clinic's published schedule as of March 2026. All AUD conversions use a rate of 1 AUD = 0.64 USD (Reserve Bank of Australia indicative rate, March 2026). Prices are indicative — individual treatment plans vary based on clinical assessment.
Executive Summary
Full-arch dental rehabilitation in Australia has become one of the country's most financially inaccessible elective procedures. An All-on-4 restoration costs AUD 35,000–55,000 per arch at a private Australian clinic, and neither Medicare nor the vast majority of private health funds covers the implant component — leaving patients to fund the procedure entirely out of pocket. Against this backdrop, Vietnam has emerged as the leading dental tourism destination for Australians, offering the same Nobel Biocare and Straumann implant systems at 60–75% lower prices, with direct flights under 10 hours from Sydney and Melbourne. Picasso Dental Clinic, operating six locations across four Vietnamese cities since 2013, has treated more than 70,000 patients from 62 countries and provides All-on-4 with Nobel Biocare implants from AUD 13,500 per arch and OSSTEM-based All-on-4 from AUD 9,500 per arch. Even including return flights and two weeks' accommodation, total trip costs for a dual-arch All-on-4 case run to approximately AUD 22,000–35,000, compared with AUD 70,000–110,000 in Australia — a potential saving exceeding AUD 40,000–75,000.
Contents
- 1. Australia's All-on-4 Affordability Crisis
- 2. Insurance & Medicare Coverage Gap
- 3. Full Procedure Cost Comparison — 14 Treatments
- 4. All-on-4 vs All-on-6: Which Is Right for You?
- 5. Flight Routes from Australia to Vietnam
- 6. Total Trip Cost Modelling — 3 Scenarios
- 7. Clinical Outcomes & Implant Survival Data
- 8. Vietnam City Guide for Australian Patients
- 9. Vietnam vs Thailand vs Malaysia
- 10. Risk Mitigation & Due Diligence
- 11. Step-by-Step Treatment Journey
- 12. Conclusions & Recommendations
- 13. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Australia's All-on-4 Affordability Crisis
Australia has among the highest dental costs in the developed world. The Australian Dental Association's 2024 fee survey recorded an average All-on-4 full arch procedure price of AUD 43,000 in major metropolitan areas, with specialist prosthodontists in Sydney and Melbourne regularly quoting AUD 50,000–55,000 per arch [1]. For edentulous patients requiring both arches, the total commitment exceeds AUD 80,000–110,000 — more than twice the median Australian household's annual disposable income.
This pricing reflects the genuine cost structure of Australian dentistry: high labour costs (dental specialists earn AUD 180,000–350,000 per year), steep commercial rents in metropolitan centres, substantial medical indemnity insurance premiums, and an equipment amortisation burden not substantially offset by volume. The cost is real, not inflated — but it has placed full-arch rehabilitation entirely out of reach for the majority of Australians who need it.
1.1 Who Needs All-on-4?
The primary candidate pool is Australians aged 50–75 with severe periodontal disease, widespread tooth loss, or failing dentitions (multiple failing crowns, cracked teeth, or extensive decay). The AIHW's 2022 National Dental Telephone Interview Survey estimated that 6.4% of Australian adults are edentulous in one or both arches, and a further 14% have severe tooth loss affecting function [2]. That represents approximately 1.3 million Australians who could clinically benefit from full-arch rehabilitation — of whom only a small fraction can access it at domestic prices.
2. Insurance & Medicare Coverage Gap
Unlike hip replacements or cardiac surgery, dental implants receive no Medicare rebate in Australia. The Medicare Benefits Schedule lists Item 316 (surgical extraction) and Item 322 (complicated surgical extraction), but there is no MBS item number for implant fixture placement, abutment fitting, or implant-supported crown and bridge work [3]. This policy has not changed since the introduction of Medicare in 1984.
Private health insurance with major dental extras typically covers a portion of dental crown and bridge costs under the "major dental" category — but most policies specifically exclude osseointegrated implant fixtures from coverage, meaning patients receive reimbursement only on the prosthetic component (the crown or bridge) and bear the full cost of the implant surgery itself. A standard Extras policy with major dental cover might reimburse AUD 800–1,500 toward a full-arch restoration that costs AUD 40,000 — a coverage rate below 5%.
The Australian Dental Association estimates that fewer than 1 in 8 Australians who need full-arch implant rehabilitation actually proceed with treatment — citing cost as the primary barrier in 74% of deferred-treatment cases [1]. Of those who do proceed, approximately 14% now travel overseas for part or all of their treatment.
3. Full Procedure Cost Comparison — 14 Treatments
The table below compares standard private-clinic prices in Australia with Picasso Dental Clinic's published fees in Vietnam, expressed in AUD at an exchange rate of 1 AUD = 0.64 USD (Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2026). Australian prices are derived from the ADA 2024 national fee survey and AIHW patient cost data [1][2].
| Procedure | Australia (AUD) | Picasso Vietnam (AUD) | Saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| Check-up & X-ray | $230–$350 | $30 | ~87% |
| Scale & polish (clean) | $200–$320 | $40 | ~85% |
| Composite filling (1 surface) | $200–$350 | $40–$60 | ~83% |
| Root canal — premolar | $1,400–$2,200 | $200 | ~87% |
| Root canal — molar | $1,800–$3,500 | $280 | ~87% |
| Extraction — simple | $200–$400 | $45 | ~80% |
| Wisdom tooth — surgical | $400–$900 | $90 | ~80% |
| Porcelain crown (zirconia) | $1,800–$2,500 | $280 | ~85% |
| Porcelain veneer (e.max) | $1,800–$2,500 | $470 | ~75% |
| 20 veneers full smile | $36,000–$50,000 | $9,400 | ~75% |
| Teeth whitening (in-chair) | $600–$1,200 | $140 | ~80% |
| Single implant — OSSTEM (incl. crown) | $4,500–$7,000 | $1,400 | ~76% |
| Single implant — Straumann (incl. crown) | $5,500–$8,000 | $2,340 | ~72% |
| All-on-4 per arch — OSSTEM | $35,000–$55,000 | $9,500 | ~74% |
| All-on-4 per arch — Nobel Biocare | $35,000–$55,000 | $13,750 | ~65% |
| All-on-4 both arches — OSSTEM | $70,000–$110,000 | $19,000 | ~75% |
| All-on-4 both arches — Nobel Biocare | $70,000–$110,000 | $27,500 | ~66% |
| All-on-6 per arch — Straumann | $40,000–$60,000 | $16,875 | ~65% |
| Bone graft (per site) | $600–$1,500 | $200 | ~75% |
| Sinus lift | $2,500–$5,000 | $625 | ~80% |
4. All-on-4 vs All-on-6: Which Is Right for You?
Both All-on-4 and All-on-6 use a fixed number of implant fixtures to support a full-arch bridge, eliminating the need for individual implants per tooth and enabling same-day temporary function. The key differences relate to bone requirements, long-term load distribution, and cost.
4.1 All-on-4 — The Standard Protocol
The All-on-4 technique, developed by Dr. Paulo Maló and commercialised by Nobel Biocare, uses four implants per arch — two placed axially at the front and two tilted at 30–45° at the rear to maximise contact with available bone. The tilted posterior implants allow placement in patients who have experienced some bone resorption, often avoiding the need for bone grafting. At Picasso Dental, All-on-4 with Nobel Biocare implants costs AUD 13,500–14,200 per arch, and OSSTEM-based All-on-4 from AUD 9,500 per arch.
4.2 All-on-6 — Enhanced Stability for Demanding Cases
All-on-6 uses six implants per arch, providing greater primary stability, wider load distribution, and additional security for patients who grind their teeth (bruxism) or who have higher bite forces. All-on-6 is typically recommended for patients with denser bone, larger jaws, or a preference for the added redundancy of two extra fixtures. At Picasso, All-on-6 with Straumann implants costs AUD 16,875 per arch — still 60–65% below comparable Australian pricing.
| Factor | All-on-4 | All-on-6 |
|---|---|---|
| Implants per arch | 4 | 6 |
| Bone graft requirement | Often avoidable | Sometimes needed |
| Ideal candidate | Moderate bone loss | Good bone volume, bruxism |
| Treatment time (first visit) | 5–7 days | 5–7 days |
| Osseointegration period | 3–5 months | 3–5 months |
| Bridge teeth supported | 10–12 | 12–14 |
| Picasso price — OSSTEM (AUD/arch) | $9,500 | $12,500 |
| Picasso price — Nobel Biocare (AUD/arch) | $13,750 | N/A |
| Picasso price — Straumann (AUD/arch) | $13,125 | $16,875 |
| Warranty — implant fixture | 7–10 years | 10 years (Straumann) |
The choice between All-on-4 and All-on-6 is made by the implantologist based on CBCT imaging after the consultation — not before. Patients should be cautious about any clinic that commits to a specific protocol before reviewing a 3D scan. At Picasso, the CBCT assessment is included in the initial consultation and informs the written treatment plan sent to Australian patients before they travel.
5. Flight Routes from Australia to Vietnam
Vietnam is well-connected from all major Australian capitals. Direct and one-stop services to Hanoi (HAN), Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) and Da Nang (DAD) operate year-round, with the majority of routes involving at most one brief transit. The flight distance is comparable to a domestic Australian red-eye from Perth to Sydney, making it a manageable trip even for older patients.
| Departure | Destination | Duration | Key Airlines | Return Fare (AUD est.) | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sydney (SYD) | Hanoi (HAN) | ~10h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Scoot via Singapore | $750–$1,100 | Daily |
| Sydney (SYD) | Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) | ~9h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Singapore Airlines, Jetstar | $700–$1,000 | Daily |
| Melbourne (MEL) | Hanoi (HAN) | ~9.5h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Scoot | $750–$1,100 | Daily |
| Melbourne (MEL) | Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) | ~9h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Singapore Airlines | $700–$1,000 | Daily |
| Brisbane (BNE) | Hanoi (HAN) | ~9.5h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Scoot via Singapore | $750–$1,100 | Daily |
| Brisbane (BNE) | Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) | ~8.5h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Jetstar | $680–$980 | Daily |
| Perth (PER) | Hanoi (HAN) | ~10.5h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, Singapore Airlines | $850–$1,200 | 5× weekly |
| Perth (PER) | Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) | ~9.5h (1 stop) | Vietnam Airlines, AirAsia | $800–$1,100 | Daily |
Australian passport holders enter Vietnam visa-free for up to 45 days under Vietnam's permanent unilateral exemption (effective August 2023). For stays exceeding 45 days, an e-visa ($US 25, issued within 3 business days at evisa.xuatnhapcanh.gov.vn) permits 90-day single-entry stays. No medical or dental tourism visa category exists — standard visitor admission applies. Picasso's coordination team can provide a treatment letter if required for insurance or employer notification purposes.
6. Total Trip Cost Modelling — 3 Scenarios
The following three scenarios model complete all-in trip costs for Australian patients, including flights, accommodation, and procedure fees. All prices in AUD. Exchange rate: 1 AUD = 0.64 USD; 1 AUD ≈ 16,500 VND (March 2026).
6.1 Scenario A — Single Implant (OSSTEM, Hanoi)
| Item | Cost (AUD) |
|---|---|
| Single implant + zirconia crown (OSSTEM) — Picasso Hanoi | $1,400 |
| Return flight Sydney–Hanoi (economy, 8 weeks' notice) | $850 |
| Accommodation (7 nights × AUD 55/night, 3-star Hanoi) | $385 |
| Meals & transport (7 days × AUD 40) | $280 |
| Total trip cost | $2,915 |
| Australian clinic equivalent (OSSTEM, Sydney) | $5,250 avg |
| Total saving | ~$2,335 (45%) |
6.2 Scenario B — All-on-4 Single Arch (Nobel Biocare, Two Visits)
| Item | Cost (AUD) |
|---|---|
| All-on-4 per arch — Nobel Biocare + zirconia bridge (Picasso) | $13,750 |
| Return flights × 2 trips (Melbourne–Hanoi) | $1,800 |
| Accommodation — Trip 1: 8 nights; Trip 2: 5 nights = 13 nights × AUD 65 | $845 |
| Meals & transport (13 days × AUD 45) | $585 |
| Contingency / incidentals | $300 |
| Total trip cost | $17,280 |
| Australian clinic equivalent (Nobel Biocare, Melbourne) | $43,000 avg |
| Total saving | ~$25,720 (60%) |
6.3 Scenario C — All-on-4 Both Arches (Nobel Biocare, Two Visits)
| Item | Cost (AUD) |
|---|---|
| All-on-4 both arches — Nobel Biocare + zirconia bridges (Picasso) | $27,500 |
| Return flights × 2 trips (Sydney–Hanoi) | $1,900 |
| Accommodation — 14 nights × AUD 75 (superior hotel, Hanoi) | $1,050 |
| Meals & transport (14 days × AUD 50) | $700 |
| Contingency & post-op pharmacy | $400 |
| Total trip cost | $31,550 |
| Australian clinic equivalent (Nobel Biocare, Sydney — both arches) | $86,000 avg |
| Total saving | ~$54,450 (63%) |
7. Clinical Outcomes & Implant Survival Data
Concerns about clinical quality are the primary reason Australian patients hesitate before pursuing overseas dental treatment. The evidence base for modern implant dentistry — when performed with validated implant systems — is among the strongest in all of medicine.
7.1 Peer-Reviewed Survival Rate Evidence
A 2025 Israeli registry study published in MDPI analysed 158,824 implants placed in 53,874 patients and found an overall failure rate of just 2.21%, representing a 97.8% survival rate [4]. A 2024 meta-analysis by Kupka et al. in Clinical Oral Investigations reviewed 20 years of long-term implant data and found 5-year survival rates consistently above 95% across major implant systems [5]. Moraschini et al.'s longitudinal review (2015) of 7,711 implants over a mean follow-up of 13.4 years reported a cumulative survival rate of 94.6% at 10 years [6]. These figures are for implants placed under standard surgical conditions — the specific brand and protocol matter more than the country of placement.
| Metric | Data |
|---|---|
| Years in operation | Since 2013 (12+ years) |
| International patients treated | 70,000+ from 62 countries |
| Implant brands used | Straumann (CH), Nobel Biocare (SE/CH), OSSTEM (KR) |
| Implant fixture warranty | 10 years — Straumann & Nobel Biocare; 7 years — OSSTEM |
| All-on-4 bridge warranty | 5–10 years (written) |
| In-house CBCT imaging | All 6 clinic locations |
| Implant passport issued | Yes — manufacturer serial number, model, placement date |
| English communication | Full English clinical & coordination team |
| Claimed success rate | 95%+ (clinic-reported) |
7.2 All-on-4 Specific Outcomes
The All-on-4 concept was validated in a series of long-term studies by Maló et al. using Nobel Biocare fixtures. A 2019 prospective study following 242 arches over 10 years reported a cumulative implant survival rate of 94.8%, with prosthesis survival at 99.2% [7]. Failures were predominantly early (pre-osseointegration) and concentrated in patients with uncontrolled diabetes or active smoking. Neither of these factors precludes treatment — but they require pre-treatment discussion and management.
The clinical outcome of an All-on-4 restoration depends on: (1) the implant brand and fixture design; (2) the skill and experience of the placing surgeon; (3) the quality of the imaging and planning; and (4) patient compliance with post-surgical care. Picasso Dental uses the same Straumann and Nobel Biocare fixtures available at Australian specialist clinics, employs CBCT-guided surgical planning, and has placed implants in thousands of international patients. The gap is in price — not in materials or planning methodology.
8. Vietnam City Guide for Australian Patients
Picasso Dental operates across four Vietnamese cities, giving Australian patients flexibility to combine treatment with a broader travel experience. Each city has distinct character, climate, and travel logistics.
| City | Flight from Sydney | Picasso Location | Best For | Hotel (3-star/night AUD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hanoi | ~10h (1 stop) | Chau Long (Ba Dinh) & Embassy Garden (Bac Tu Liem) | Extended stays, history, culture; closest to major international hospital | $45–$80 |
| Ho Chi Minh City | ~9h (1 stop) | Thao Dien, District 2 | Expat amenities, modern city, fastest food delivery & recovery comforts | $50–$90 |
| Da Nang | ~9.5h via connection | Hoang Dieu & Vinmec Hospital (ground floor) | Beach recovery, Hoi An day trips, most relaxed pace | $40–$70 |
| Da Lat | ~10h via HCMC | Ha Huy Tap | Cool climate recovery (1,500m elevation), scenic highland city | $35–$60 |
9. Vietnam vs Thailand vs Malaysia
Australia's dental tourists have historically been drawn to Thailand (particularly Bangkok's Bumrungrad and BIDC network) and, to a lesser extent, Malaysia (Kuala Lumpur). Vietnam has grown rapidly as a competing destination over the past decade, driven primarily by price. The comparison below assesses each destination across the key dimensions relevant to an Australian patient planning All-on-4 treatment.
| Factor | Vietnam (Picasso) | Thailand (Bangkok) | Malaysia (KL) |
|---|---|---|---|
| All-on-4 per arch — Nobel (AUD) | $13,750 | $15,500–$18,000 | $12,500–$16,000 |
| All-on-4 per arch — OSSTEM (AUD) | $9,500 | $12,000–$14,000 | $9,500–$12,000 |
| Flight from Sydney | ~10h (1 stop) | ~9h (1 stop) | ~8.5h (1 stop) |
| Visa-free entry for Australians | 45 days | 30 days | 30 days |
| English proficiency (clinical) | High at international clinics | High at international clinics | High (official language) |
| Accommodation (3-star/night AUD) | $45–$80 | $65–$120 | $55–$100 |
| Post-op recovery environment | Beach (Da Nang), city, highlands | Beach (Phuket), city (Bangkok) | City-focused; Langkawi beach |
| Implant brand availability | Straumann, Nobel, OSSTEM | Straumann, Nobel, Osstem, ITI | Straumann, Nobel, OSSTEM |
| 10-year implant warranty | Yes (Straumann/Nobel) | Yes (varies by clinic) | Yes (varies by clinic) |
| Overall cost ranking (lowest = best) | 1st | 3rd | 2nd |
Vietnam's primary advantage over Thailand is price: a Nobel Biocare All-on-4 at Picasso costs approximately AUD 1,750–4,250 less per arch than equivalent Bangkok pricing. For a dual-arch case, that is a further saving of AUD 3,500–8,500 compared with Thailand. Malaysia is competitive on price but has fewer dedicated dental tourism clinics with international patient coordination comparable to Picasso's scale. Flight times from Australia are broadly similar across all three destinations, giving Vietnam a clear value advantage without a meaningful travel time penalty.
10. Risk Mitigation & Due Diligence
The risks associated with overseas dental treatment are real but manageable with appropriate due diligence. The primary risk categories are: clinical complications (implant failure, infection, nerve injury), communication failures (misunderstood treatment plans), and aftercare gaps (inability to access warranty repairs or complications management in Australia). Structured pre-trip planning eliminates most of these risks.
10.1 Clinic Evaluation Checklist
| Criterion | What to Check | Picasso Dental |
|---|---|---|
| Licensing | Vietnam MOH clinic licence | ✅ Licensed — 6 clinics across 4 cities |
| Implant brands | Named global brands, not generics | ✅ Straumann, Nobel Biocare, OSSTEM |
| Material traceability | Serial numbers & batch data provided | ✅ Implant passport issued |
| CBCT imaging | In-house 3D scanning capability | ✅ All locations |
| Written treatment plan | Fixed pricing before you travel | ✅ Via WhatsApp/email |
| Written warranty | Formal warranty documentation | ✅ 7–10 years on implants |
| English communication | Fluent English clinical staff | ✅ Full English service |
| Patient volume | Track record with international patients | ✅ 70,000+ patients, 62 countries |
10.2 Warranty & Implant Traceability
| Component | Warranty |
|---|---|
| Straumann implant fixture | 10 years |
| Nobel Biocare implant fixture | 10 years |
| OSSTEM implant fixture | 7 years |
| Zirconia / e.max crowns & veneers | 5–15 years |
| All-on-4 bridge | 5–10 years |
10.3 Aftercare Protocol for Australian Patients
Days 1–7 in Vietnam: Surgery & initial healing
Implant placement, temporary bridge fitting, post-surgical review. Soft diet. Clinic provides 24-hour WhatsApp contact for any concerns.
Weeks 2–4 back in Australia: Early osseointegration
Soft diet continues. Forward dental X-ray and check to your Australian dentist at week 4. Share implant passport and Picasso treatment records.
Months 2–4: Osseointegration monitoring
No action required if comfortable. WhatsApp Picasso's coordinator with any questions. Australian dentist check at month 3 recommended.
Month 4–5: Return to Vietnam for final bridge
5-day second trip. CBCT confirmation of osseointegration, final zirconia or reinforced acrylic bridge fitting, written warranty issued.
Ongoing in Australia: Annual hygiene maintenance
Professional clean and implant review by your Australian dentist every 6–12 months. Maintain warranty validity. Picasso remote support available indefinitely via WhatsApp.
10.4 Red Flags to Avoid
Decline or reconsider if a clinic: (1) cannot name the specific implant brand or model; (2) does not have in-house CBCT scanning; (3) provides a quote without reviewing any X-rays; (4) offers "lifetime" warranties without written documentation; (5) communicates primarily through a third-party broker with no direct clinic contact; (6) quotes All-on-4 at prices under AUD 5,000 per arch (typically indicates generic, uncertified implant systems).
11. Step-by-Step Treatment Journey
The following timeline describes the complete All-on-4 journey for an Australian patient from initial inquiry to final restoration.
Step 1 — Remote consultation (Week 1, at home in Australia)
WhatsApp your OPG panoramic X-ray or CBCT scan to +84 989 067 888. Receive a written treatment plan with fixed AUD pricing, recommended implant system, and estimated timeline within 48 hours. No deposit required at this stage.
Step 2 — Book flights & accommodation (Weeks 2–4)
Book return flights and hotel for your first visit (plan 7–10 days). Picasso's team can recommend accommodation close to your chosen clinic location. No health insurance or medical visa required.
Step 3 — First visit: Consultation, planning & surgery (Days 1–7 in Vietnam)
Day 1: CBCT in-clinic, full consultation, finalise treatment plan and confirm AUD pricing. Days 2–3: Any required extractions. Day 3–4: All-on-4 implant fixture placement, temporary bridge fitted (you leave with functional teeth). Days 5–7: Post-surgical review, discharge, implant passport issued.
Step 4 — Healing period in Australia (Months 1–4)
Live normally with temporary bridge. Soft diet for first 6–8 weeks. Australian dentist review at month 3. Picasso WhatsApp support throughout.
Step 5 — Second visit: Final bridge (Days 1–5 in Vietnam)
CBCT confirms full osseointegration. Final zirconia or premium acrylic bridge fabricated and fitted. Written warranty issued. Total time in Vietnam: 4–5 days.
Step 6 — Long-term care in Australia
Annual implant hygiene with your Australian dentist using implant passport for reference. Picasso remote support continues via WhatsApp indefinitely.
12. Conclusions & Recommendations
For Australians facing All-on-4 full arch implant treatment, the financial case for dental tourism to Vietnam is compelling and the clinical risk — when a qualified, internationally experienced clinic is selected — is manageable. At Picasso Dental Clinic, an All-on-4 restoration with Nobel Biocare implants and a zirconia bridge costs AUD 13,750 per arch, compared with an average of AUD 43,000 at Australian private clinics. Including two return flights and accommodation across both visits, the complete two-arch treatment trip costs approximately AUD 31,550 — a saving of AUD 54,000+ compared with Australian pricing for the same Nobel Biocare implant system with the same 10-year written warranty.
The three implant brands offered by Picasso — Straumann, Nobel Biocare and OSSTEM — are identical to those available at top Australian implant specialists. The price difference reflects Vietnam's lower cost base, not a difference in material quality. Peer-reviewed evidence confirms implant survival rates of 94–98% at 5–10 years across all three systems, regardless of placement geography. The key determinant of outcome is surgeon experience and planning quality — not the country of placement.
Australian patients are advised to: obtain a written treatment plan with itemised AUD pricing before travelling; confirm CBCT 3D imaging is included; insist on a named implant brand with full serial number traceability; receive a written warranty at discharge; and maintain annual hygiene reviews with an Australian dentist to support the warranty. The dental tourism journey requires planning and two trips of approximately one week each — but for patients facing a AUD 40,000–110,000 treatment need at home, the effort is well-justified.
13. Frequently Asked Questions
How much can Australians save on All-on-4 dental implants in Vietnam?
Australian patients typically pay AUD 35,000–55,000 per arch at home. At Picasso Dental in Vietnam, the same procedure with Nobel Biocare implants costs AUD 13,750 per arch — a saving of approximately 60–68%. Even after two return flights and accommodation, total savings on a dual-arch case typically exceed AUD 40,000–75,000.
How long is the flight from Australia to Vietnam?
Sydney and Melbourne to Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City is approximately 9–10 hours with one stop (typically Singapore, Kuala Lumpur or Bangkok). Brisbane is marginally shorter at 8.5–9.5 hours. Return fares from major Australian cities average AUD 700–1,100.
What implant brands does Picasso Dental use?
Picasso uses Straumann (Switzerland), Nobel Biocare (Sweden/Switzerland), and OSSTEM (South Korea) — all globally certified brands available at leading implant clinics worldwide. Written warranties of 10 years are provided for Straumann and Nobel Biocare fixtures, and 7 years for OSSTEM.
Do Australians need a visa for Vietnam?
No. Australian passport holders enter Vietnam visa-free for up to 45 days — sufficient for both treatment trips. An e-visa (USD 25) extends this to 90 days if needed.
Does Australian private health insurance cover overseas dental treatment?
No. Standard Australian extras policies do not cover treatment performed overseas, and Medicare provides no dental coverage at all for implants. Patients self-fund all treatment costs and recoup their investment through the significant price difference.
Why choose Vietnam over Thailand for All-on-4?
Vietnam offers the same implant brands at a further 15–30% cost reduction compared with top Bangkok clinics. Flight times are broadly equivalent (9–10 hours from Sydney or Melbourne). Vietnam's lower cost base directly reduces procedure pricing without compromising materials or planning quality.
Get Your Free All-on-4 Treatment Plan
Send your OPG X-ray or CBCT scan to Picasso's international team via WhatsApp. Receive a detailed treatment plan with fixed AUD pricing within 48 hours — no obligation, no hidden fees.
WhatsApp: +84 989 067 888Sources & References
[1] Australian Dental Association. (2024). National Dental Fee Survey 2024. ADA, Sydney.
[2] Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2022). National Dental Telephone Interview Survey — Oral Health and Dental Care in Australia. AIHW, Canberra.
[3] Australian Government Department of Health. (2025). Medicare Benefits Schedule — Dental Items 316, 322. MBS Online.
[4] Amer, A. et al. (2025). "Dental Implant Survival Rates: Comprehensive Insights from a Large-Scale Electronic Dental Registry." MDPI Dentistry Journal. 158,824 implants; overall failure rate 2.21%.
[5] Kupka, J.R. et al. (2024). "How far can we go? A 20-year meta-analysis of dental implant survival rates." Clinical Oral Investigations, 28(10):541.
[6] Moraschini, V., Poubel, L.A., Ferreira, V.F., & Barboza, E.S. (2015). "Evaluation of survival and success rates of dental implants reported in longitudinal studies with a follow-up period of at least 10 years." International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 44(3):377–388.
[7] Maló, P. et al. (2019). "Ten-year outcome of All-on-4 treatment concept using Nobel Biocare implants." Clinical Implant Dentistry and Related Research, 21(4):658–666.
[8] Lunt, N., & Carrera, P.M. (2022). "International dental tourism: patient motivations, risks and outcomes." Health Policy, 126(3):192–198.
[9] Skyscanner. (2026). Flight price data Australia–Vietnam routes, January–March 2026. skyscanner.com.au.
[10] Reserve Bank of Australia. (2026). AUD/USD exchange rate, March 2026. rba.gov.au.
Commercial Interest Declaration: This report is published by Picasso Dental Clinic. While every effort has been made to present accurate, independently sourced data, readers should note the publisher's commercial interest when evaluating treatment recommendations. All external sources are referenced with citations above.
Changelog: v1.0 — 5 March 2026: Initial publication targeting Australian All-on-4 market.