Root Canal vs Extraction: Which Is Really Better?
Save the tooth or take it out? The honest comparison between root canals and extracting + replacing.
Dr. Fatima Hassan
General Dentist & Endodontist
When each is appropriate
Save (root canal) is better when
- Enough tooth structure remains to restore with a crown
- Roots are intact, not fractured
- Surrounding bone is healthy
- Patient can afford the root canal + crown combination
- Tooth is strategic (front tooth, or a molar anchoring a future bridge)
Extract + replace is better when
- The tooth is vertically fractured into the root
- Severe bone loss has left little support
- Root canal has been redone and still fails
- Crown-to-root ratio is unfavourable
- Patient has budget for an implant and prefers a definitive solution
The success rate comparison
- Root canal + crown at 10 years: ~85–90% survival
- Single implant at 10 years: ~95%
Implants edge out root canals on survival statistics, but that doesn't make them automatically the better choice. A saved natural tooth with intact periodontal ligament has better sensory feedback and better bone preservation than any implant.
Cost comparison in Dubai
Root canal pathway
- Root canal: AED 2,500–4,500
- Post + core (to rebuild the tooth): AED 800–1,500
- Crown: AED 2,500–6,000
- Total: AED 5,800–12,000
Extraction + implant pathway
- Extraction: AED 500–1,500
- Bone graft (often needed): AED 1,500–3,500
- Implant fixture: AED 3,500–6,500
- Abutment + crown: AED 3,500–7,500
- Total: AED 9,000–19,000
Root canals are cheaper up-front. Implants are comparable or more expensive but with very high longevity.
Time commitment
- Root canal + crown: 2–3 visits over 2–4 weeks
- Implant pathway: 4–6 visits over 4–6 months
The critical factor most patients miss
The question is rarely "root canal vs implant" in isolation. The real question is "can this specific tooth be predictably saved?" If yes, save it. If no, the extraction + implant option is honest and appropriate.
A dentist who reflexively recommends extraction for any painful tooth, or who reflexively saves every tooth regardless of prognosis, is not doing the right assessment. Ask to see the x-ray and have the prognosis explained.
Retreatment — when a root canal fails
First root canals succeed 85–95% of the time. If one fails after a few years, options are:
- Retreatment: redo the root canal (success rate 70–85%)
- Apical surgery: micro-surgery to reach the root tip from outside
- Extraction + implant: definitive solution
References
- American Association of Endodontists
- Journal of Endodontics — Long-term outcomes
Referenced sources
- AAE
- J. Endodontics
Medical disclaimer. This article is informational and does not replace professional clinical advice. For a plan specific to your situation, book a consultation with a Paradise Dental specialist.
Related reading
Root Canal vs Extraction: Which Hurts More?
Both are comfortable with modern anaesthesia. The real difference is aftermath.
When Do You Really Need a Root Canal?
Not every toothache is a root canal. Here's how dentists actually decide, and what the alternatives look like.
Dry Socket: Causes, Symptoms, and Prevention
Dry socket occurs in 2–5% of extractions and is intensely painful — but it's preventable. Here's what you need to know.