At Gorgeous Smiles, bonding starts from $450 per tooth, with pricing ranging up to $850 depending on the size and complexity of the work involved. That price covers the cosmetic consultation assessment, composite resin materials chosen for colour accuracy and durability, colour matching, polishing, a digital scan, and a follow-up appointment. We break down the specific cost factors, multi-tooth pricing scenarios, and how bonding compares to veneers in the sections below. To find out exactly where your case falls, you can book a $95 cosmetic consultation at our Melbourne CBD clinic.
All costs on this page are indicative. Full costs will be discussed with your dentist prior to treatment and may vary based on your individual case.

The scope of work on each tooth is the single largest factor in your dental bonding cost. Repairing a small chip on a front tooth is a quicker, simpler procedure than closing a visible gap, addressing a crooked tooth, or rebuilding the biting edge of a worn incisal surface. Simple cases sit closer to $450 per tooth; more involved reshaping or rebuilding work sits toward the $850 end.
Each tooth demands individual sculpting and layering from the dentist, and more teeth means more composite resin, more colour matching, and more chair time. All of that adds to the total cost.
Budget-grade composite resin bonds to the tooth and looks acceptable initially, but it tends to yellow or pick up stains within a couple of years. Higher-grade tooth coloured composite resin keeps its shade longer and resists discolouration from coffee, tea, and red wine. If you're bonding teeth in your smile zone, the material grade can affect how long the result maintains its appearance.
Bonding at Gorgeous Smiles is used to treat chipped, cracked, broken, gapped, crooked, or misshapen teeth, as well as teeth that are too short or too long relative to the rest of the smile. That said, each case needs to be assessed and confirmed by your dentist before treatment begins. Not every issue is suited to bonding, and your dentist will tell you upfront if a different approach would be more appropriate.
The composite bonding procedure involves preparing the tooth surface with a conditioning liquid that helps the bonding agent adhere properly to your natural tooth. Your dentist then applies the tooth coloured resin material in layers, shaping it to the desired shape before hardening it with a special light. Once set, the bonding is polished to blend with the surrounding teeth. The process covers the full procedure across two appointments, giving your dentist time to assess the result and make any fine adjustments at your follow-up.
Most people researching dental bonding cost aren't thinking about a single tooth. Here's what a few common scenarios look like at Gorgeous Smiles, so you can estimate where your case might land.
All costs are indicative. Full costs will be discussed prior to treatment.
Patient A has a single chipped front tooth. The chip is small and the tooth structure around it is intact. Composite bonding treatment starts from $450 per tooth, and the work is completed across two appointments.
Patient B wants to close a gap between their two upper front teeth. Two teeth need bonding, so the starting cost is around $900. Both teeth are treated with the dentist matching colour and symmetry across the pair.
Patient C wants to address the shape and alignment of their four upper front teeth. Four teeth brings the starting cost to around $1,800. The dentist sculpts across a wider area, working to balance proportions across all four teeth.
Patient D wants to treat six or more teeth. At $450 to $850 per tooth, that's $2,700 and up. At this point, it's worth discussing with your dentist whether composite veneers might be more appropriate. When treating that many teeth, veneers may provide more uniform coverage across the teeth being treated.
All costs are indicative. Full costs will be discussed prior to treatment.
The per tooth bonding price isn't the only number worth knowing. These aren't hidden fees. They're things worth planning for upfront so your final cost doesn't catch you off guard.
If you haven't had a professional scale and clean in the past six months, it's recommended before the bonding process begins. Clean tooth surfaces bond better, and removing plaque or tartar improves both adhesion and longevity of the composite.
If you want a brighter shade across all your teeth, whitening needs to happen first. The composite is then colour-matched to your new, lighter natural teeth. Skipping this step and whitening later means the bonding stays its original shade while your teeth lighten around it.
If you've broken or chipped a tooth and need same-day or after-hours treatment, expect to pay 20 to 40 percent more than a scheduled appointment.
This is the comparison most patients are weighing up. Here's how dental bonding compares to composite veneers and porcelain veneers.
All costs are indicative. Full costs will be discussed prior to treatment.
| Factor | Dental Bonding | Composite Veneers | Porcelain Veneers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost per tooth | From $450 | From $450 | From $2,000 |
| Visits required | 2 | 1 to 2 | 2 to 4 |
| Tooth preparation | Minimal to none | Minimal | Moderate (enamel removal) |
| Durability | 2 to 7 years | 5 to 8 years | 10 to 15 years |
| Stain resistance | Lower | Moderate | High |
| Reversibility | Generally reversible | Mostly reversible | Not reversible |
| Best for | 1 to 3 teeth, minor fixes | 4 to 10 teeth, broader smile changes | Full smile makeovers, maximum durability |
The numbers tell part of the story, but the right option depends on your situation.
If you're fixing a single chipped tooth or closing a small gap, bonding is typically appropriate. It preserves your natural tooth structure and requires no enamel removal. Unlike porcelain veneers, bonding is generally reversible — if you change your mind years later, you haven't committed to irreversible preparation.
One of the key characteristics of composite bonding is that the procedure is conservative and reversible for most patients. Once you're looking at four or more teeth, composite veneers may be worth discussing with your dentist. The composite veneers cost per tooth is comparable to bonding, but veneers give the dentist greater control over shape and uniformity across a wider set of teeth.
For patients who want longer durability and higher stain resistance, porcelain veneers are the longer-lasting option. They cost roughly three to four times the starting bonding price per tooth, but they can last 10 to 15 years with proper care. However, porcelain requires tooth preparation, making it an irreversible treatment. No-prep veneers sit in between and are worth discussing with your dentist if you want porcelain without significant tooth structure loss.
Your dentist will discuss which option is most appropriate for your clinical situation at your consultation.
All dental treatments carry risks. Risks of dental bonding include the composite resin chipping, cracking, or debonding from the tooth over time; staining or discolouration of the bonding material, particularly with coffee, tea, red wine, or smoking; the bonding not matching perfectly with the surrounding teeth over time as natural teeth change colour with age; sensitivity after the procedure, particularly if tooth preparation was involved; and the need for replacement as bonding is not permanent and typically lasts 2 to 7 years. The longevity and appearance of bonding depends on your oral hygiene, diet, and habits such as teeth grinding.
Your dentist will discuss all risks specific to your case before proceeding.
For full information about risks and potential side effects, please visit our treatment risks page: https://www.gorgeoussmiles.com.au/treatment-risks/
Most private health insurance plans classify dental bonding as a cosmetic procedure, and most don't cover cosmetic work or only offer limited rebates.
However, if the bonding is performed to repair structural damage or restore tooth function (such as a cracked tooth affecting your bite, rather than a purely aesthetic fix), some health funds provide partial rebates under major dental extras. The distinction between "cosmetic" and "restorative" is what determines whether your fund will contribute.
The level of insurance coverage depends entirely on your specific extras policy. There's no universal rule that applies across all funds.
Here's how to check. After your consultation at Gorgeous Smiles, ask for the item codes listed on your treatment plan. Call your health fund and quote those codes directly. The fund will tell you whether you're covered and what rebate applies to your policy.
Gorgeous Smiles offers flexible payment plans with 0% interest through AfterPay, Humm and Zip Money. You can structure repayments weekly, fortnightly, or monthly depending on what works for your budget.
If the dental bonding cost for multiple teeth feels steep as a single expense, you can stage the treatment. Bond the most visible teeth first, then return for the rest when your budget allows. Your dentist can plan the colour matching and sequencing so the staged work still looks consistent across your teeth.
All costs are indicative. Full costs will be discussed prior to treatment.
Every smile is different, and a personalised dental bonding quote requires an in-person assessment. Gorgeous Smiles cosmetic consultations include a session with your dentist, professional photos, and a detailed treatment plan with clear pricing. Your dentist will also discuss all risks involved. You'll leave knowing what your composite bonding will cost, what preparation is needed, and what timeline to expect.
For full information about treatment risks, please visit: https://www.gorgeoussmiles.com.au/treatment-risks/
Gorgeous Smiles Melbourne CBD | 121 Exhibition St | Book online or call (03) 9042 0483
Treatment at Gorgeous Smiles is completed across two appointments. If the work is straightforward and no preparatory treatment is needed, your dentist may be able to schedule your appointments close together. If cleaning or whitening is recommended first, you'll need to factor that in before bonding begins.
Bonding and fillings both use composite resin, but bonding involves cosmetic shaping and precise colour-matching that a standard filling doesn't require. Fillings at Gorgeous Smiles range from $195 to $595. Cosmetic bonding starts from $450 per tooth. The price difference reflects the additional shaping and chair time involved in achieving a cosmetic result.
A minor chip repair is among the simpler bonding procedures. At Gorgeous Smiles, bonding starts from $450 per tooth. The exact price depends on the chip's size and location, and how much reshaping the dentist needs to do.
Yes. Bonding typically lasts two to seven years depending on care and lifestyle habits. Teeth grinding, biting hard objects, and poor oral hygiene habits all shorten the lifespan of the composite resin. Maintaining good oral hygiene, brushing with a soft bristled toothbrush, and attending regular dental check-ups all help support the longevity of bonding. When comparing bonding to alternatives like porcelain veneers (which last 10 to 15 years with proper care), you should factor in the replacement cost as part of your long-term calculation.
No. Composite bonding resin does not respond to whitening treatments. If you want whiter teeth, whitening must happen on your natural teeth before your dental bonding procedure so the composite can be colour-matched to your new shade.
Good oral hygiene is the main factor. Brush twice daily with a soft bristled toothbrush, floss regularly, and keep up with regular dental visits. Avoid biting hard objects or using your teeth as tools, as composite resin is more prone to chipping than natural enamel or porcelain. If you grind your teeth at night, speak to your dentist about a night guard before starting bonding treatment.