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35 NPI-verified oral surgery practices in Fort Worth, TX
35
Verified practices
0
Accept Insurance
0
Owner-Claimed
Oral and maxillofacial surgeons are the surgical specialists of dentistry. They perform complex tooth extractions (including wisdom teeth), place dental implants, treat facial trauma and jaw fractures, remove tumors and cysts, and perform corrective jaw surgery. They complete 4–6 years of hospital-based surgical training after dental school and are the only dental specialists recognized as surgeons.
In Fort Worth, 35 verified oral surgery practices serve the community. Across the Fort Worth oral surgery practices compared on this page, the strongest predicted dimension is pain management, based on verified signals.
Surgical removal of impacted or problematic third molars under local anesthesia or sedation
Precise placement of titanium implants into jawbone — often with 3D-guided surgery for accuracy
Corrective surgery to realign jaws for better function, appearance, and airway
Rebuilding jawbone using synthetic materials or your own bone to enable implant placement
Treatment of facial fractures, jaw fractures, and soft tissue injuries from accidents
Diagnosis and surgical removal of cysts, tumors, and lesions in the mouth and jaws
Nationally, oral surgery services range from $250–$700 per per tooth (simple extraction). Wisdom teeth: $300–$800 per tooth ($800–$3,000 all four). Implants: $3,000–$6,000. Insurance often covers a portion.
Vibe Prediction across 13 dimensions, predicted from verified practice signals (NPI data, specialties, services, Google ratings, hours), not from patient review text.
Based on 16 of the 20 Fort Worth oral surgery practices compared on this page.
4420 Heritage Trace Pkwy Suite 300
Fort Worth, TX 76244
(817) 479-0541
5825 Edwards Ranch Rd Suite 200
Fort Worth, TX 76109
(817) 927-1818
7217 Hawkins View Dr Suite 200
Fort Worth, TX 76132
(817) 292-3605
See an oral surgeon for wisdom tooth pain or swelling, broken teeth that can't be saved, dental implant placement, jaw pain or clicking, facial injury, or suspicious lumps in your mouth. Most general dentists refer to oral surgeons, but you can schedule a consultation directly — especially for wisdom teeth evaluation.