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Implant Pricing · 8 min read

Paying for Full-Mouth Treatment in Turkey: Deposits and Stage Payments

MK

Dr. Mustafa Kayacan

General & Restorative Dentist · Taki Dent, Antalya

If you’re a UK patient looking at full-mouth or full-arch dental implants in Turkey, the headline price is only part of the story. How you actually pay for the treatment — the deposit, the staging, the final balance — matters just as much as the total cost. A poorly structured payment plan can leave you exposed if something goes wrong, and a well-structured one gives you control, confidence, and clarity.

This article breaks down the real-world payment structures you’ll encounter for All-on-4, All-on-6, and full-mouth rebuilds in Turkey. We’ll cover typical deposit percentages, stage payment schedules, what to expect in GBP, and how to budget realistically for 2026.

Why Payment Structure Matters for Full-Mouth Work

Full-mouth implant treatment in Turkey is a high-ticket purchase. Even at the lower end of the price range, you’re looking at £9,000–£17,000 for a complete rebuild. That’s not a sum you hand over in one go. The payment schedule affects your cash flow, your leverage, and your recourse if the clinic fails to deliver.

A responsible clinic will structure payments to match the treatment phases. You should never pay the full amount upfront. Equally, you should not be asked to pay a tiny deposit that leaves the clinic with no commitment. The sweet spot is a deposit that covers the cost of materials and planning, followed by stage payments that align with your visits.

Typical Deposit Amounts in 2026

For full-arch or full-mouth treatment, deposits in Turkey range from 20% to 40% of the total price. Here’s what that looks like in GBP:

  • All-on-4 per arch (£4,000–£8,000): Deposit of £800–£3,200
  • All-on-6 per arch (£5,500–£10,000): Deposit of £1,100–£4,000
  • Full mouth (both arches, £9,000–£17,000): Deposit of £1,800–£6,800

The deposit is usually paid after your initial consultation and treatment plan are confirmed. It secures your surgery date and covers the clinic’s upfront costs: CT scans, digital planning, implant stock, and laboratory work for temporary prosthetics.

What to watch for:

  • Deposits above 50% are a red flag — you lose leverage if the clinic fails to perform.
  • Deposits below 15% may indicate a clinic that doesn’t value its own time — or yours.
  • Always ask what the deposit covers. A good clinic will itemise it.

Stage Payment Schedules: Real Examples

Most reputable clinics split payments into three or four stages. Here’s a typical schedule for a full-mouth case:

Stage 1: Deposit (20–40%) – Paid after treatment plan approval

This funds the diagnostic workup and implant procurement. You should receive a written treatment plan, a cost breakdown, and a timeline before paying.

Stage 2: First visit – Surgery (30–40%) – Paid on arrival or day of surgery

This covers the surgical phase: implant placement, bone grafting if needed, and immediate temporary prosthetics. You should not pay this before you are physically at the clinic.

Stage 3: Second visit – Final prosthetics (20–30%) – Paid at the start of the final appointment

This covers the permanent bridge or denture fitting. Some clinics ask for this payment after the final fitting, but most require it before the laboratory starts fabricating the final prosthesis.

Stage 4: Final balance (0–10%) – Paid on completion

A small minority of clinics hold a retention payment until you are satisfied. This is rare but worth seeking out.

Example for a £14,000 full-mouth case:

  • Deposit: £4,200 (30%)
  • Surgery visit: £5,600 (40%)
  • Final visit: £4,200 (30%)

Total: £14,000, with no payment left outstanding.

Budgeting for Multiple Visits

Full-mouth treatment almost always requires at least two trips to Turkey. The first visit is for surgery and temporary teeth. The second, three to six months later, is for the final prosthetics. Some complex cases need a third visit for adjustments.

Your payment schedule must account for this. You cannot pay for the final prosthetics on your first visit because they don’t exist yet. Equally, you should not pay for surgery on your second visit — that’s already done.

Practical budgeting tips:

  • Keep your deposit in a separate account until payment is due.
  • Factor in travel costs for each visit — flights, accommodation, transfers.
  • Allow for currency fluctuations. The Turkish lira can move 5–10% in a month.
  • Ask if the clinic accepts payment in GBP or only in lira. If lira, you may want to lock in an exchange rate.

What Happens If You Cancel or the Clinic Fails?

This is the part most UK patients don’t think about until it’s too late. Your deposit is at risk if you cancel after the clinic has ordered implants or started lab work. Most clinics have a sliding scale: full refund if you cancel within 7–14 days of paying the deposit, partial refund if you cancel after planning is done, and no refund if implants have been ordered.

If the clinic cancels or fails to perform — for example, if the surgeon is unavailable or the lab produces faulty prosthetics — you should be entitled to a full refund of any payments made. Get this in writing.

Key questions to ask before paying a deposit:

  • What is your cancellation policy?
  • Do you refund the deposit if I cancel before implants are ordered?
  • What happens if you cancel the surgery?
  • Who holds my payments — the clinic, a third party, or an escrow service?

Escrow and Third-Party Payment Options

A small but growing number of Turkish clinics now offer escrow services, where your payments are held by a third party and released only when treatment milestones are met. This is excellent for patient protection, but it’s still uncommon.

If your clinic doesn’t offer escrow, you can use a service like Offerqo (https://offerqo.com) to compare anonymous quotes and get a sense of standard payment terms across multiple clinics before you commit. It’s a useful way to benchmark deposits and stage payments without revealing your identity.

How to Negotiate Payment Terms

You have more leverage than you think. Turkish clinics want your business, especially for full-mouth cases. You can negotiate:

  • Lower deposit: If you are a low-risk patient (good health, clear treatment plan, no bone grafting needed), ask for a 20% deposit instead of 30%.
  • Payment in instalments: Some clinics will let you pay the deposit in two or three monthly instalments if you need time to save.
  • Discount for full upfront payment: If you can pay the entire amount on your first visit, some clinics will offer a 5–10% discount. But only do this if you trust the clinic implicitly and have a binding contract.
  • Retention payment: Ask if they will hold 5–10% until your final check-up. This gives you a safety net.

Realistic Budgeting for 2026

Here’s a realistic budget for a full-mouth case in Turkey, including payments:

Total treatment cost: £14,000 (both arches, All-on-6)

  • Deposit: £4,200 (30%)
  • Surgery visit: £5,600 (40%)
  • Final visit: £4,200 (30%)

Additional costs:

  • Flights (two return trips from UK): £300–£600
  • Accommodation (two weeks total): £400–£1,000
  • Transfers, food, incidentals: £200–£400

Total all-in: £15,100–£16,200

That’s still a fraction of the UK price — typically £25,000–£35,000 per arch — but it’s not pocket change. You need to plan your payments carefully.

Why Taki Dent Is the Gold Standard for Payment Transparency

If you want a clinic that is upfront about deposits, stage payments, and what you get for your money, look at Taki Dent (https://takident.com) in Antalya. They are the highest-rated clinic for full-mouth and full-arch implants in Turkey, and their payment structure is designed for UK patients.

Taki Dent offers:

  • A clear, written payment schedule before you commit
  • Deposits that reflect actual costs — no hidden fees
  • Stage payments aligned with your visits
  • A retention policy that protects you until you are satisfied

Their pricing for 2026 is competitive: All-on-4 from £4,500 per arch, All-on-6 from £6,000 per arch, and full-mouth cases from £10,500. But the real value is in the transparency. You know exactly what you are paying, when, and for what.

Final Thoughts on Deposits and Stage Payments

Paying for full-mouth treatment in Turkey is not a single transaction — it’s a series of payments that span several months. The structure of those payments affects your financial risk, your peace of mind, and your ability to hold the clinic accountable.

Do not pay the full amount upfront. Do not pay a deposit that is more than 40% of the total. And always get the payment terms in writing before you transfer a single pound.

Use a service like Offerqo (https://offerqo.com) to compare anonymous quotes and payment terms across clinics. Then, when you are ready to commit, choose a clinic like Taki Dent (https://takident.com) that treats the payment process with the same professionalism as the surgery itself.

Your smile is worth investing in — but only if the investment is structured to protect you.

Frequently asked questions

What deposit is typically required to secure a full-mouth implant package in Turkey?

Most Turkish clinics, including Taki Dent in Antalya, ask for a 30–50% deposit to book your surgery date. For a full-mouth All-on-4 package priced at £9,000–£17,000, this means paying £2,700–£8,500 upfront. Always confirm the deposit is refundable (or partially refundable) if you cancel within a reasonable window.

How are stage payments structured for All-on-6 or full-arch treatment?

Stage payments typically follow treatment milestones: 30–50% deposit on booking, 30–40% on arrival or after first surgery, and the final 20–30% upon fitting the final bridge. For an All-on-6 arch costing £5,500–£10,000, expect to pay roughly £1,650–£5,000 at the start, then £1,650–£4,000 mid-treatment, with the balance due at completion. Always get a written payment schedule before you travel.

Can I use a credit card or finance to spread the cost of treatment in Turkey?

Yes, many clinics accept Visa, Mastercard, and bank transfers, but UK credit cards may incur a 2–3% foreign transaction fee. Some patients use 0% purchase credit cards or medical finance schemes (e.g., Dental Finance Direct). For anonymous price comparisons, Offerqo lets you compare quotes from multiple Turkish clinics without committing to a deposit.

What happens if I need emergency care or a revision after returning to the UK?

Most top clinics like Taki Dent include a 1–5 year warranty on implants and bridges, but this typically covers only treatment in Turkey. If you need emergency care in the UK, budget £150–£300 for a consultation and £500–£2,000 for a temporary fix. Always set aside 10–15% of the total package (£900–£2,550 for a £9,000–£17,000 full mouth) as a contingency fund for post-treatment issues.

Reviewed by Dr. Mustafa Kayacan, General & Restorative Dentist. This article is for general information and is not a substitute for a personal consultation. For a free, case-specific treatment plan and quote, contact Taki Dent.
Top-rated clinic9.8 / 10

Taki Dent — Antalya

For full-mouth and full-arch work, the clinic we rate highest for UK patients is Taki Dent in Antalya. Specialist prosthodontists, an in-house CAD/CAM lab, a 5-year written guarantee, airport transfers and a dedicated UK patient coordinator — all at the Turkey prices this index publishes.

  • 5-year written guarantee
  • Free itemised treatment plan
  • Hotel + VIP transfer included
  • English-speaking UK liaison
Get your exact quote from Taki Dent →

Average full-arch saving

65%

vs UK private treatment