2026 data Public-data reference. official source

Surgical Removal of Residual Tooth Roots

Open-data reference.

CDT D7250 Oral Surgery · typical chair time: 45 min

About surgical removal of residual tooth roots

What it is: Surgical removal of remaining tooth roots The American Dental Association assigns this procedure CDT code D7250, which is the standardized billing code used by every Medicaid program and dental insurance carrier in the United States.

What it costs: The national private-market average is $389 based on the ADA Health Policy Institute Survey of Dental Fees (2024). State variation pushes this between $$343 (lowest cost-of-living states) and $$466 (highest). State Medicaid programs that cover surgical removal of residual tooth roots for adults reimburse an average of $210 (range $149–$280 across covering states).

Why state matters: Two factors drive the spread. First, state Medicaid programs negotiate their own dental fee schedules — high-paying states pay roughly 1.5x what low-paying states pay for the identical CDT code. Second, the private market follows local cost of living, captured by the Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Price Parities. The full state-by-state table is below.

$389
National avg. private cost
$210
Avg. Medicaid reimbursement
(across covering states)
19/51
States covering this procedure
36%
Max state spread (private)

Top 10 states: Surgical Removal of Residual Tooth Roots private cost vs national average

New York$466District of Columbia$463California$451Hawaii$450New Jersey$450Massachusetts$439Maryland$438Washington$436Connecticut$434Alaska$420
Top 10 states: Surgical Removal of Residual Tooth Roots private cost vs national average

Surgical Removal of Residual Tooth Roots cost by state

State Medicaid fee Private estimate Adult coverage
Alabama Not covered $344 emergency
Alaska $280 $420 extensive
Arizona Not covered $384 emergency
Arkansas Not covered $349 limited
California $204 $451 extensive
Colorado Not covered $408 limited
Connecticut $228 $434 extensive
Delaware Not covered $399 none
District of Columbia $251 $463 extensive
Florida Not covered $395 emergency
Georgia Not covered $368 emergency
Hawaii Not covered $450 limited
Idaho Not covered $372 limited
Illinois $149 $397 extensive
Indiana Not covered $361 limited
Iowa $187 $359 extensive
Kansas Not covered $360 emergency
Kentucky Not covered $353 limited
Louisiana Not covered $363 limited
Maine Not covered $395 limited
Maryland $202 $438 extensive
Massachusetts $221 $439 extensive
Michigan $163 $377 extensive
Minnesota $246 $399 extensive
Mississippi Not covered $343 emergency
Missouri Not covered $363 limited
Montana Not covered $374 limited
Nebraska Not covered $363 limited
Nevada Not covered $395 limited
New Hampshire $176 $417 extensive
New Jersey $204 $450 extensive
New Mexico Not covered $367 limited
New York $261 $466 extensive
North Carolina Not covered $368 limited
North Dakota $228 $365 extensive
Ohio Not covered $363 limited
Oklahoma Not covered $356 emergency
Oregon $202 $407 extensive
Pennsylvania Not covered $388 limited
Rhode Island $180 $399 extensive
South Carolina Not covered $363 limited
South Dakota Not covered $352 emergency
Tennessee Not covered $359 emergency
Texas Not covered $383 emergency
Utah Not covered $384 limited
Vermont $201 $397 extensive
Virginia $187 $405 extensive
Washington $209 $436 extensive
West Virginia Not covered $349 limited
Wisconsin Not covered $380 limited
Wyoming Not covered $379 limited

Analysis: how to think about surgical removal of residual tooth roots costs

The roughly 36% spread between the lowest- and highest-cost states for surgical removal of residual tooth roots comes almost entirely from cost of living, not from differences in clinical complexity. A dentist's fee for a D7250 procedure in Mississippi (BEA RPP 86.4) versus New York (BEA RPP 117.5) tracks the local rent, wages, and supply costs the practice has to cover. The ADA HPI national average we start from is the population-weighted survey value across all surveyed practices.

The Medicaid coverage column matters more than the Medicaid fee itself for most adults. In the 19 jurisdictions that do reimburse for surgical removal of residual tooth roots under their adult Medicaid program, the reimbursement averages around $210 — about 54% of the average private fee. Practices that accept Medicaid are absorbing the gap, which is why "Medicaid-accepting dentist" is not always easy to find. For a state-specific look at adult dental coverage scope, see each state page.

When budgeting for this procedure: treat the private estimate as a midpoint, not a ceiling. Specialty providers (oral surgeons, prosthodontists, periodontists) typically charge 15–40% above the general dentist rate for procedures within their specialty. Get a written treatment estimate before treatment, and ask whether the figure is the procedure fee alone or whether it bundles diagnostic codes (X-rays, exams) commonly billed alongside.

Related

Compare across all procedures

Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.

Source: ADA Health Policy Institute, Survey of Dental Fees (2024) and Medicaid Reimbursement Compendium. State Medicaid rates: each state's published dental fee schedule (current 2026 Q1). Disclaimer: Costs shown are estimates derived from publicly-published averages and a state-level cost-of-living adjustment. Actual fees depend on the specific dentist, the geographic submarket, and clinical complexity. This site does not provide medical or dental advice.

Frequently asked questions

How much does surgical removal of residual tooth roots cost in the United States?
The national private-market average for surgical removal of residual tooth roots (CDT D7250) is approximately $389 based on the ADA Health Policy Institute Survey of Dental Fees (2024). State variation runs from $343 (lowest cost-of-living states) to $466 (highest).
Does Medicaid cover surgical removal of residual tooth roots?
19 state Medicaid programs cover surgical removal of residual tooth roots for adults, with average reimbursement of $210 (range $149-$280). Coverage varies by state — see the per-state table on this page.
Why does surgical removal of residual tooth roots cost so much more in some states?
Three drivers explain the variation: state cost of living (BEA Regional Price Parities, ranging from 86 to 117), state Medicaid policy (which affects provider supply), and dentist density per capita. See our analysis of state cost spread for the full breakdown.