All-on-4 vs All-on-6: Which Lasts Longer?
Specialist Prosthodontist · Taki Dent, Antalya
"Which one lasts longer?" is a fair question — you are investing in teeth you hope to keep for life. But the honest answer surprises many patients: in most cases, All-on-4 and All-on-6 last about the same. What truly determines longevity is not the number of implants, but how the case is planned, who places it, and how you look after it. Let me explain what the evidence actually shows.
What the 10-year data says
Long-term studies of full-arch implant rehabilitation report implant survival of roughly 94–98% at ten years for both four- and six-implant configurations, in well-selected cases placed by experienced surgeons. The original All-on-4 protocol now has well over fifteen years of follow-up showing that four well-placed implants reliably carry a full arch for decades. All-on-6 shows comparably high survival and, in some high-load analyses, slightly fewer mechanical complications.
| Measure | All-on-4 | All-on-6 |
|---|---|---|
| 10-year implant survival | ≈94–98% | ≈94–98% |
| Realistic prosthesis lifespan | 15–20+ years | 15–20+ years |
| Safety margin if one fails | Lower (3 remain) | Higher (5 remain) |
| Resilience under heavy bite | Good | Stronger |
Why implants fail — and where the count helps
Understanding failure explains the real difference between the systems. Full-arch implants fail for two reasons:
- Biological failure (peri-implantitis): infection and bone loss around the implant, driven mostly by hygiene, smoking and uncontrolled diabetes. Here, the number of implants makes little difference — your habits do.
- Mechanical overload: too much force fracturing components or loosening implants. This is where six implants earn their keep, by spreading load so each fixture carries less stress.
So the nuance is this: for a patient with good bone, a moderate bite and excellent hygiene, All-on-4 lasts every bit as long as All-on-6. For a heavy grinder or someone with a long arch, the extra mechanical resilience of All-on-6 can meaningfully lower the risk of a mid-life complication.
The redundancy advantage
There is one durability benefit that is easy to grasp: a spare. If one implant in an All-on-4 case is lost, you have lost a quarter of your support, which can compromise the whole bridge until it is rebuilt. Lose one of six in All-on-6 and five implants still carry the arch — often enough to keep it working while the problem is managed. For risk-averse patients with the bone to support it, that insurance is a legitimate reason to choose All-on-6.
What actually decides how long yours lasts
Whichever you choose, longevity comes down to:
- Accurate CBCT-guided planning and precise surgical placement.
- Premium implant systems and a well-engineered bridge (zirconia, not just acrylic).
- Your daily hygiene and attendance at reviews.
- Not smoking, and managing conditions like diabetes.
- A night guard if you grind.
This is why I tell patients the clinic matters more than the procedure. A specialist-led, accredited clinic with a written guarantee will give you a longer-lasting All-on-4 than a budget clinic will give you on All-on-6. You can read the full evidence on our longevity and success-rates page.
The verdict
Neither procedure is meaningfully longer-lasting on its own. Choose All-on-6 for the safety margin if you have the bone and a heavy bite; choose All-on-4 with full confidence if your case suits it — and then protect either with hygiene, reviews and a clinic that stands behind its work.
At Taki Dent we back every full-arch case with a 5-year written guarantee and structured aftercare that can be coordinated with your own UK dentist — because the years after surgery decide how long your new teeth truly last.
Frequently asked questions
Which lasts longer, All-on-4 or All-on-6?
Both can last 20+ years, with similar 10-year survival (around 94–98%). All-on-6 adds a safety margin for grinders and heavy bites; for most patients All-on-4 lasts just as long.
What makes full-arch implants fail?
Biological failure (peri-implantitis from hygiene, smoking, diabetes) and mechanical overload. Implant count helps mainly with overload; your habits control the rest.
Does losing one implant ruin the bridge?
Not necessarily. With All-on-6, five implants still support the arch. With All-on-4, losing one removes a quarter of the support and more often needs a rebuild.