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Tooth pain does not ask permission. It hits on a Tuesday night or right before a work meeting, and the first thing most people want to know is what it is going to cost before they call anyone. Grand Prairie Family Dental has been answering that question honestly since 1988. Dr. Behrooz Khademazad built this practice on one principle: you know the full cost before anything happens, and nothing moves forward until you say so.

Most families in Grand Prairie are balancing real budgets and full schedules. A dental emergency is already stressful enough without the added anxiety of not knowing what the bill will look like until it arrives. Dr. Khademazad’s $99 emergency exam is designed to eliminate that uncertainty on the first visit. You leave knowing exactly what is going on, what it costs, and what your options are before any treatment is scheduled.

What Determines the Cost of a Dental Emergency

Emergency dental costs vary because every situation is different. A cracked tooth and a dental abscess require completely different treatment and carry very different price tags. No dentist can give you an accurate number over the phone because the cost depends on what is actually happening in your mouth and how far the problem has progressed.

  • Emergency exam: $99 at Grand Prairie Family Dental, includes evaluation, imaging, and full treatment plan
  • Simple tooth extraction: $150 to $300 before insurance, surgical cases run higher
  • Root canal, front tooth: $700 to $1,000
  • Root canal, back tooth: $900 to $1,400, more complex root system
  • Dental crown: $1,000 to $1,800 depending on tooth location and materials
  • Chipped tooth repair with bonding: $200 to $600
  • Lost filling or crown: $100 to $300 for a filling, crown cost depends on damage
  • Dental abscess treatment: $300 to $1,500 depending on how far the infection has spread

Every number above is a starting range, not a final quote. Your specific tooth, jaw structure, and how long the problem has been developing all affect the actual cost. The $99 exam is how you get the accurate answer for your situation, not a guess based on someone else’s case.

What the $99 Emergency Exam Includes

The $99 emergency exam at Grand Prairie Family Dental is not a quick glance. Dr. Khademazad examines the full problem area, takes whatever imaging is needed to understand what is happening beneath the surface, and produces a complete picture of your options and costs before anything is scheduled. Most patients tell us they leave that appointment knowing more about their dental situation than they have in years, because Dr. Khademazad takes the time to explain the findings in plain language rather than handing you a treatment plan you have to decode on your own.

Nothing is scheduled until you say so. If the findings are more involved than expected, Dr. Khademazad will walk you through what needs attention now, what can safely wait, and what each path costs. Many patients in Grand Prairie have told us that the exam alone gave them the clarity they needed to make a confident decision. Even when the news was not what they hoped to hear. That kind of straightforward conversation is what 35 years in the same community produces.

What Does Emergency Dental Care Cost in Grand Prairie TX?

Does Insurance Cover Dental Emergencies

Most PPO dental insurance plans cover at least a portion of emergency dental care. Emergency exams and X-rays are typically covered in part, and treatment costs like extractions, root canals, and crowns are often covered at 50 to 80 percent depending on your plan, your deductible, and your annual maximum. The exact coverage depends on how your plan classifies each procedure and how much of your annual benefit has already been used.

Grand Prairie Family Dental works with most PPO insurance plans and has financing options available to spread treatment costs into smaller monthly payments for patients who need them. The team can walk you through your benefits before treatment begins so there are no surprises when the bill arrives. If you are unsure what your plan covers, calling the office before your visit is a good first step.

Why Waiting Makes Emergency Dental Costs Go Up

A dental problem left alone does not stay the same size. A small crack you notice today looks completely different in two weeks after daily pressure widens it along the fracture line. What starts as a straightforward crown case becomes a much larger restorative situation once the tooth structure breaks down further and the nerve becomes involved. Dr. Khademazad has watched this pattern repeat thousands of times over 35 years of emergency care in Grand Prairie, and the financial gap between treating something early and treating it late is almost always measured in hundreds, sometimes thousands, of dollars.

Infections are the clearest example of how delay drives cost. A dental abscess that goes untreated does not stay localized. It spreads into surrounding bone and tissue, and what begins as a treatable infection can become an extraction case requiring bone grafting to preserve the jaw structure for any future restoration. Dr. Khademazad has advanced training in bone grafting and implant placement, which means he sees the downstream consequences of delayed emergency care more clearly than most general dentists. The clinical reality is not complicated: earlier treatment preserves more of the natural tooth and costs significantly less.

The $99 emergency exam exists because early information almost always leads to a simpler and less expensive path forward. Knowing what you are dealing with on day one gives you real options. Waiting until the pain or damage forces your hand closes most of those options off. Dr. Khademazad’s approach has always been to give patients the honest picture early so they can make a confident decision.

Emergency Dental Costs in Grand Prairie: How Common Situations Compare

Knowing how common emergency dental situations typically break down makes it easier to plan before you call. The table below compares typical cost ranges for dental emergencies in the Grand Prairie area with what patients can expect at Grand Prairie Family Dental. These ranges reflect what is commonly charged in the area and should be used as a planning guide, not a quote. Your actual cost depends on what Dr. Khademazad finds at the exam.

Emergency SituationTypical Range in Grand PrairieAt Grand Prairie Family Dental
Emergency exam$29 to $150$99, includes evaluation and full treatment plan
Simple tooth extraction$150 to $300Assessed at exam, no surprises
Root canal, front tooth$700 to $1,000Assessed at exam
Root canal, back tooth$900 to $1,400Assessed at exam
Dental crown$1,000 to $1,800Assessed at exam
Chipped tooth repair (bonding)$200 to $600Assessed at exam
Lost filling replacement$100 to $300Assessed at exam
Dental abscess treatment$300 to $1,500Assessed at exam

One pattern runs consistently across every row in that table: the patients who pay the least are the ones who came in early, before the problem had time to grow. The patients at the high end of every range almost always waited longer than they should have. Dr. Khademazad does not say this to create pressure. He says it because 35 years of treating dental emergencies in Grand Prairie has made the pattern impossible to ignore.

Honest Emergency Dental Care in Grand Prairie, and a Doctor Who Has Been Here Long Enough to Mean It

Most people arrive at an emergency dental visit already carrying two fears. The first is the pain. The second is sitting across from a dentist who recommends a long list of expensive things and hands them a treatment plan they cannot afford and were not expecting. That second fear is the one Dr. Khademazad has spent 35 years eliminating at Grand Prairie Family Dental.

You are not walking into an unknown situation here. Dr. Khademazad opened this practice in 1988, and many of the patients he sees for emergencies today are the children and grandchildren of people he treated in his first decade of practice. His treatment philosophy has not changed in all that time: fix what the clinical findings support, leave what does not need to be touched, and tell you the honest truth before asking you to decide anything. Thursday evening hours run until 7pm for patients who cannot get away during the day. The $99 emergency exam is the first step. You will leave knowing exactly where you stand, the cost, and what comes next if you choose to move forward.

Grand Prairie Family Dental

972-988-0900

2475 W Pioneer Pkwy Grand Prairie, Texas, 75051

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Frequently Asked Questions About Emergency Dental Costs in Grand Prairie TX

How much does an emergency dental exam cost in Grand Prairie TX? 

Emergency exam fees in Grand Prairie range from $29 at the low end to $150 depending on the practice. Grand Prairie Family Dental charges $99 for the emergency exam. It includes a thorough evaluation of the problem area, any necessary X-rays, and a complete treatment plan with costs before anything is scheduled.

Will my dental insurance cover a dental emergency in Grand Prairie? 

Most PPO dental insurance plans cover emergency exams and X-rays in part. Treatment costs like extractions, root canals, and crowns are typically covered at 50 to 80 percent depending on your plan, your annual maximum, and your deductible. Coverage depends on your specific policy and how much of your benefit year has been used. The team at Grand Prairie Family Dental can review your benefits before treatment begins so you know what to expect.

What counts as a dental emergency? 

Severe or worsening tooth pain, a cracked or broken tooth, a knocked-out tooth, swelling in the jaw or gums, a lost filling or crown that exposes the underlying tooth, and visible signs of infection such as a bump on the gums or facial swelling all require same-day attention. When in doubt, call the office and describe what is happening. The team at Grand Prairie Family Dental can help you assess whether your situation needs to be seen today. 

How do I know if my tooth pain is serious enough to come in today? 

If the pain is severe, getting worse, or keeping you from eating or sleeping, come in today. Swelling in the face or jaw is always urgent. Pain that comes and goes and stays mild may be worth monitoring for 24 hours, but any pain that worsens or does not resolve on its own should be evaluated by a dentist. Dr. Khademazad’s team at Grand Prairie Family Dental can help you assess urgency over the phone before you make the trip.

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