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Invisalign pricing is one of the most opaque in dentistry. The same treatment can cost $2,500 at a general dentist or $8,000 at an orthodontist — not because one is better, but because pricing is driven by who delivers it, where you live, and how complex your case is.
This calculator accounts for the Invisalign product tier (Lite, Moderate, Comprehensive), provider type, geographic cost differences, and insurance offset — the same factors your dentist uses when quoting treatment.
Invisalign's pricing structure is deliberately complex — Align Technology charges providers based on case count and tier level, and providers mark up freely based on their market position. The same Invisalign Comprehensive treatment can vary by $3,000–$4,000 within the same city depending on who you choose.
| Invisalign Product | Case Type | Cost Range | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Invisalign Lite | Minor corrections (<14 aligners) | $2,500–$4,500 | 3–6 months |
| Invisalign Moderate | Moderate corrections (up to 26 aligners) | $3,500–$6,000 | 6–18 months |
| Invisalign Comprehensive | Complex corrections, unlimited aligners | $4,500–$8,000 | 12–24 months |
| Invisalign Teen | Teens, includes replacement aligners | $3,000–$7,500 | 12–24 months |
| Invisalign First | Children (Phase 1, ages 6–10) | $2,000–$4,000 | 6–12 months |
For simple to moderate cases, a certified general dentist delivers comparable outcomes at 15–25% lower cost than an orthodontist. For complex cases — significant crowding, bite correction, or cases requiring many attachments — an orthodontist's additional training is genuinely valuable. The key question to ask: "How many Invisalign cases do you complete per year?" Providers completing 50+ cases annually have far more refined technique than those doing 5–10.
Direct-to-consumer aligners (Byte, Candid, SmileDirectClub alternatives) cost $1,500–$2,500 but are only appropriate for very mild crowding and spacing issues. They skip in-person monitoring, which increases the risk of undetected bite complications. For moderate to complex cases, in-office Invisalign remains the clinically appropriate choice. Comparable clear aligner brands (3M Clarity, ClearCorrect, Spark) may be offered at 10–20% lower prices than Invisalign at the same office.
Invisalign pricing is structurally opaque — Align Technology (the manufacturer) sets tiered lab fees based on provider case volume, and providers mark up independently. The same Invisalign Comprehensive treatment can differ by $3,000–$4,000 within the same city depending on provider tier and market position. This calculator applies the documented pricing drivers to produce a personalized estimate before your consultation.
Align Technology sells Invisalign to providers in distinct product tiers based on the number of aligners included. Providers pay different lab fees per tier, which are passed on with markup to patients:
| Product Tier | Aligners Included | Base Cost Range | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Invisalign Lite | Up to 14 aligners | $2,500–$4,500 | 3–6 months |
| Invisalign Moderate | Up to 26 aligners | $3,500–$6,000 | 6–18 months |
| Invisalign Comprehensive | Unlimited aligners | $4,500–$8,000 | 12–24 months |
| Invisalign Comprehensive+ | Unlimited + additional trays | $5,500–$9,000 | 18–36 months |
Important: Only Comprehensive tiers include unlimited refinement aligners. Lite does not — additional trays cost $500–$1,500 extra. This distinction is not always disclosed at consultation.
Dental practice overhead scales with local cost of living. Multipliers are calibrated to ADA Health Policy Institute orthodontic fee data by geographic region:
| Region | Multiplier | Representative States |
|---|---|---|
| High cost | 1.4× | CA, NY, MA, WA, CT |
| Above average | 1.15× | CO, OR, NJ, IL, FL |
| National average | 1.0× | Blended US median |
| Below average | 0.85× | TX, AZ, NC, VA |
| Low cost | 0.70× | AR, MS, AL, KY, WV |
Align Technology operates a tiered provider certification program based on annual case volume. Higher-tier providers pay lower lab fees but typically charge more per case — the net effect depends on the market:
| Provider Tier | Multiplier | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Dental school / resident | 0.80× | Supervised training environment. Best for mild-moderate cases. Longer treatment timeline. |
| GP (Invisalign certified) | 1.0× | Baseline. Requires minimum case count to maintain certification. Appropriate for mild-moderate cases. |
| Orthodontist (Preferred/Elite) | 1.2× | Specialist training in tooth movement. Best for complex cases involving bite correction and significant crowding. |
| Diamond / Diamond+ provider | 1.35× | High-volume specialists. Access to proprietary tools (ClinCheck Pro advanced). Justified for highly complex cases. |
Treating a single arch (top or bottom only) costs approximately 65% of dual-arch treatment — not 50% — because the planning, iTero scanning, and clinical monitoring costs are largely fixed regardless of arch count. The 65% multiplier reflects published single-arch pricing patterns from multiple orthodontic practices surveyed in 2025–2026.
Base cost ranges are drawn from the 2026 ADA Survey of Dental Fees (CDT D8080/D8090 for comprehensive orthodontic treatment), Align Technology's published provider tier structure, and orthodontic pricing surveys from the American Association of Orthodontists. Insurance offset data reflects typical employer-sponsored dental plan lifetime orthodontic maximums as reported by the NAIC.