Gold grill prices depend on tooth count, karat, weight, labor, stones, and fit. Compare current 2026 examples and use a dental-first buying checklist.
- Plain custom solid-gold grillz often start in the low hundreds, while multi-tooth and stone-set work can reach thousands.
- The quote should separate metal, karat, tooth count, design labor, stones, fit and aftercare—not rely on price per tooth alone.
- A removable grill is jewelry, not a substitute for a crown; get dental clearance and never use glue or ignore pain.

- Plain single-tooth starting offers observed in July 2026 were roughly $110–$150 at some online sellers.
- Multi-tooth solid-gold designs commonly move into hundreds or low thousands; stone setting can add much more.
- Ask for karat, finished weight, construction, stones and total price in writing.
- A removable grill is jewelry—not a crown or dental treatment.
- Dental clearance, accurate fit and hygiene are purchase gates, not optional extras.
Price the entire object, not one tooth
Gold content matters, but a custom grill is a fabricated dental-shaped piece. The same tooth count can produce very different prices because weight, coverage, design complexity, stone quality and fit workflow differ. A low starting price may describe a minimal design before upgrades, shipping or remakes.

Gold grill price snapshot: July 14, 2026
The following examples were publicly advertised starting points checked on July 14, 2026. They are not endorsements, quotes or apples-to-apples specifications. Prices can change, and product pages may use different tooth shapes, weights, molds and stone grades.
| Market segment | Observed broad starting range | Why comparison is difficult |
|---|---|---|
| Plain single tooth | About $110–$150 at selected online listings | Finished weight, fit method and metal construction may not be equally disclosed. |
| Plain multi-tooth custom set | Several hundred to low thousands | Tooth count, open-face vs full coverage, karat and shared fabrication work change the total. |
| Stone-set or complex design | Often thousands and potentially much higher | Stone identity, grading, setting labor, pavé density and design complexity dominate. |
| Gold-plated fashion grill | Can be much cheaper | It is not equivalent to solid karat gold and may wear through. |
The cost formula behind a quote
The metal line is a reference value, not a retail quote. Fabrication waste, alloying, inventory, skill, remakes, overhead and margin remain. A seller who quotes only “price per tooth” may still be fair, but you cannot compare offers intelligently without the missing specifications.
If a 14K grill weighs 8 grams, its fine-gold equivalent is approximately 8 × 0.585 = 4.68 grams. Multiply 4.68 by the same-day gold price per gram to estimate the contained fine-gold value. Do not use that result as the expected resale price or maker’s price.
10K, 14K or 18K?
| Material | Nominal gold share | Practical trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| 10K | 41.7% | Lower gold share and generally firmer alloy; color and biocompatibility depend on the other metals. |
| 14K | 58.5% | Common balance of gold color, durability and price. |
| 18K | 75% | Richer color and higher gold content, but softer and more expensive. |
| Plated base metal | Thin surface layer | Lowest initial price but not the same construction; coating can wear and expose the base. |
“Solid gold” should mean a karat-gold alloy throughout the piece, not pure 24K. Ask which alloy metals are present—especially if you have a known nickel sensitivity—and whether solder, attachments or stones introduce other materials.
Removable grill, permanent work and crown are different
A removable grill slips over teeth and should be taken out for eating, sleeping and cleaning. A permanent cosmetic grill or modification may require irreversible dental work and carries a different risk profile. A gold crown is a restorative dental device planned and fitted by a dental professional; it is not interchangeable with jewelry.
The American Dental Association advises against cosmetic intraoral jewelry because negative outcomes can include plaque retention, caries, periodontal inflammation and tooth damage. Even a removable piece can cause trouble if it traps debris, presses on gums or alters the bite.
- Have a dentist confirm that teeth and gums are healthy enough for the intended removable jewelry.
- Get the exact karat, construction, estimated finished weight and stone description in writing.
- Confirm whether the impression is supervised, digital or an at-home kit and who pays for a remake.
- Ask how the piece should be inserted, removed, cleaned and stored.
- Never use household adhesive, force a tight piece or wear it through pain.
- Check delivery timing, insured shipping, refunds and repair responsibility.
Useful supporting tools include the gold-price guide, purity calculator, and explainers on hollow gold, authenticity checks, purity testing and white-gold alloys.
Resale value is not retail cost
A grill’s resale offer may focus on recoverable metal and stones, not the custom labor you paid for. A shape made for one mouth has limited secondhand use, and small stones may carry far less resale value than their setting cost. Keep the invoice, karat disclosure and any stone report, but do not buy on the assumption that fabrication premiums will be recovered.
If value retention matters, request finished weight and avoid vague stone descriptions. Compare the same-day fine-gold reference using the purity formula, then treat every amount above it as payment for design, fitting, craftsmanship, risk and service.
This guide is educational, not dental advice or a quote. Prices are dated examples. A dentist should assess oral-health suitability; a vendor should provide the exact commercial specification.
Knowledge Gap and Editorial Perspective
Retail pages often omit finished weight, alloy ingredients and standardized stone details. Without those fields, a precise “average cost” creates false comparability. Use broad ranges only to set a budget, then compare written specifications.
The best value is not the lowest price per tooth. It is a transparent, accurately fitted piece whose material, fabrication and aftercare can be verified without compromising oral health.
Video walkthrough: This workshop video shows why a custom grill price includes fit, modeling and fabrication—not only the gold value.
Bottom Line
Budget from the low hundreds to thousands, depending on scope, but make the decision from a complete quote. Gold weight is only one layer; custom fit, labor, stones and dental safety determine whether the purchase is sound.
FAQ: Gold Grill Cost
How much is a one-tooth gold grill?
Selected online starting offers checked in July 2026 were roughly $110–$150, but exact cost depends on karat, weight, fit and design.
Are gold grillz solid gold?
Some are karat-gold alloy throughout; others are plated. Ask for construction and karat in writing.
Is 14K or 18K better for a grill?
14K is generally firmer and less expensive; 18K has more gold and a richer color but is softer. Fit and alloy disclosure matter in both.
Can I eat or sleep with a grill?
A removable grill should generally be removed for eating, sleeping and cleaning according to professional guidance.
Can a grill damage teeth?
Poor fit and prolonged wear can retain plaque, irritate gums, affect enamel or change the bite. Seek dental assessment before use and stop if symptoms occur.
Sources and verification
Physical values, safety boundaries and market examples were checked against the following primary or specialist sources.
- American Dental Association — Oral Piercing and Jewelry — Current ADA discussion of plaque, caries, periodontal and enamel risks from dental grills and oral jewelry.
- California Dental Association — Grills — Patient guidance on removable grills, materials, fit and hygiene.
- FTC — Revised Jewelry Guides — U.S. disclosure context for gold coatings, karat and jewelry terminology.
- Gold Grillz Co — Custom Grillz — Dated July 2026 market snapshot for single-tooth, multi-tooth and stone-set examples; not an endorsement.
- Custom Gold Grillz — 14K collection — Second current retail snapshot showing how advertised starting prices vary by design.
- Grillz.com — How Much Do Grillz Cost — Published price examples and per-tooth framing used only as a market comparison.
- Safe Smiles — Grillz — Dental-health charity guidance on fit, decay and gum-disease risk.
- Zalakos — Making Gold Grills — Visual context for the custom fabrication process; not a substitute for dental assessment.
