Ceramage Crown Prices in Bali, Compared Across 26+ Clinics (2026)
Updated July 2026
Ceramage crowns are made from a hybrid composite-ceramic material by Shofu Dental of Japan, offering a budget-friendly alternative to full ceramic crowns like porcelain, zirconia, and Emax. Because Ceramage is a ceramo-polymer rather than a true glass-ceramic, it typically costs less while still delivering a natural, polishable finish. This page compares Ceramage Crown across 26 clinics in Bali. This is a smaller listing than some of our other crown pages, with 3 clinics currently publishing a Ceramage crown price, but each one gives you a verified figure to compare directly.
Ceramage Crown is compared across 26 Bali clinics on this page. Among those with published pricing, the cost runs IDR 2,500,000 to IDR 3,000,000 per crown across 3 clinics. The top-rated options are Bali Family Dental Care (4.9/5, 510 reviews) and Fidelity Dental Bali (4.9/5, 221 reviews).
The cheapest ceramage crown in Bali starts at AUD $238/tooth at Bali Family Dental Care.
Cheapest in Bali
AUD $238/tooth
Average Price
AUD $253/tooth
Most Expensive
AUD $285/tooth
What Is a Ceramage Crown?
A Ceramage crown is made from a light-cured hybrid composite-ceramic material developed by Shofu Dental, a Japanese dental materials company. Ceramage is filled with micro-fine ceramic particles bound in a polymer, which places it in its own category as a ceramo-polymer, distinct from porcelain, zirconia, or glass-ceramics such as Emax. Unlike true ceramics, Ceramage does not require kiln-firing or a crystallization step. Its final gloss is achieved through surface polishing instead, which gives it very good polishability and a smooth surface. The material is wear-resistant and comparatively gentle on the opposing teeth you bite against, which some patients and dentists value over harder full-ceramic options. It also offers good flexural strength for a composite-based material. Ceramage sits below porcelain, zirconia, and Emax crowns on price, but it is not a lesser version of those materials. It is a genuinely different option with its own strengths, positioned as an affordable choice for patients who want a solid, natural-looking crown without the cost of full ceramic.
What Affects Ceramage Crown Prices in Bali?
Several factors influence what you pay for a Ceramage crown in Bali. The location and complexity of the tooth matter: a back molar that takes heavy chewing load, or a tooth that needs extra preparation or a build-up before crowning, can involve more chair time than a straightforward case. Lab fabrication is another driver, since the crown is shaped and finished to fit your specific tooth, and the level of detail and shade-matching involved affects the cost. The number of crowns you have made in one course of treatment can also change the overall figure, as some clinics price multiple units differently from a single crown. Any additional work needed beforehand, such as replacing an old filling or treating decay under the tooth, is usually quoted separately. Among the 3 clinics on this page that have published a Ceramage crown price, the range runs from IDR 2,500,000 to IDR 3,000,000 per crown, notably below the cost of porcelain, zirconia, or Emax crowns on this directory.
Popular areas for this treatment include Ubud, Seminyak, and Kuta, where most clinics are concentrated.
Frequently Asked Questions
Among the 3 clinics on this page that publish a price, a Ceramage crown ranges from IDR 2,500,000 to IDR 3,000,000 per crown, with an average of roughly IDR 2,666,667. That places it well below porcelain, zirconia, and Emax crowns on this directory, which generally run from IDR 4,000,000 upward.
A Ceramage crown is made from a hybrid composite-ceramic material, sometimes called a ceramo-polymer. It contains micro-fine ceramic particles held in a polymer base. This makes it a distinct material category, not a type of porcelain, zirconia, or glass-ceramic such as Emax.
Ceramage is manufactured by Shofu Dental, a Japanese dental materials company. It is a branded hybrid composite-ceramic system used for crowns, veneers, inlays, and onlays.
Porcelain, zirconia, and Emax are full or glass-ceramic materials that are fired in a kiln. Ceramage is a hybrid composite-ceramic that is light-cured and polished rather than fired. It is a genuinely different material with its own strengths, such as very good polishability and being gentler on the teeth it bites against, and it is positioned as a more affordable option than those full ceramics.
Ceramage is a hybrid composite-ceramic rather than a full or glass-ceramic, and its fabrication does not require the kiln-firing and crystallization steps that true ceramics need. This generally makes it a lower-cost material to work with, which is reflected in this directory's own pricing, where Ceramage crowns sit below porcelain, zirconia, and Emax.
Ceramage offers good flexural strength for a composite-based material and is wear-resistant, which is one reason it is used for crowns rather than only for temporary restorations. It is not as hard as a full ceramic like zirconia, but its relative gentleness on the opposing teeth is something some patients and dentists see as an advantage. Your dentist can advise whether it suits the specific tooth being treated.
Yes, one of the notable properties of Ceramage is that it is comparatively gentle on the opposing teeth you bite against, compared with harder full-ceramic crowns. This can be a consideration if you grind or if the crown will bite against natural teeth.
The process is broadly similar to other crowns. The dentist prepares the tooth, takes an impression or scan, and the crown is fabricated to fit. Because Ceramage is polished rather than kiln-fired, the finishing step differs from full ceramics, but the overall patient experience is comparable. Timelines vary by clinic, so confirm the number of visits and any same-trip options directly with the clinic before you travel.
Ceramage can be a good choice if you want a natural-looking, polishable crown at a lower cost than full ceramic, and you value a material that is gentle on the opposing teeth. Whether it is right for your specific tooth depends on factors like bite load, location, and aesthetics, so it is best discussed with your dentist, who can weigh it against porcelain, zirconia, and Emax for your case.
Yes. Ceramage is a versatile hybrid composite-ceramic system used for crowns, veneers, inlays, and onlays. This page focuses on its use for crowns, but if you are considering other restorations, ask the clinic whether they offer Ceramage for those as well.
With 3 clinics publishing a Ceramage crown price, the two that rank highest using data-driven methods based on publicly available information are Bali Family Dental Care (4.9 out of 5 from 510 reviews) and Fidelity Dental Bali (4.9 out of 5 from 221 reviews). Rejuvie Dental also publishes a price. You can compare all three directly on this page.
Only 3 clinics in our directory currently publish a price for Ceramage crowns. Ceramage is a specific branded material, and not every clinic offers it or lists it publicly, so the listing here is smaller than for more common crown types. We only show prices a clinic has actually published, rather than estimating, so you are comparing real figures.
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