Dental Crown is also known as dental cap , is a type of dental restoration which completely caps or encircle a tooth or dental implant.

Prices for dental crown / cap ranges from NPR 10,000 to NPR 26,000 depending on the material you choose.
For detail about dental cap cost please Visit Our Prices / Services Page
Crown lasts for a lifetime .However, they do sometimes be loose or fall out.
Practicing good oral hygiene can ensure the longevity of your crown.
Maintain the oral hygiene with regular dental follow-up .
Everything you need to know about dental crowns — types, cost, procedure, lifespan, and aftercare — at DentaLife Oral Concern, Kathmandu.
A dental crown (also called a dental cap) is a tooth-shaped covering that fits completely over an existing tooth or dental implant — restoring its shape, size, strength, and appearance. Once cemented in place, the crown encircles the entire visible portion of the tooth above the gum line.
Dental crowns are used for several different situations:
Your dentist will recommend a crown if your tooth has one or more of the following:
A filling repairs a portion of a tooth — it fills in a cavity or small area of damage while relying on the remaining natural tooth structure for support and strength.
A crown covers the entire tooth — it is chosen when the remaining tooth structure is too compromised to support a filling reliably. Key differences:
At DentaLife Oral Concern, Kathmandu, dental crown prices range from NPR 10,000 to NPR 26,000 depending on the material chosen:
| Crown type | Approx. cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Metal crown | NPR 10,000–12,000 | Back teeth (molars) — strength priority |
| Metal-ceramic (PFM) | NPR 14,000–18,000 | Front & back — balance of aesthetics and cost |
| All-ceramic (eMax) | NPR 20,000–24,000 | Front teeth — most natural appearance |
| Zirconia crown | NPR 22,000–26,000 | Front & back — strongest, most aesthetic |
For the most current and tooth-specific pricing, visit our Prices & Services page or message us on WhatsApp before your appointment.
DentaLife offers four types of dental crowns, each suited to different situations:
There is no single "best" crown — the right choice depends on the tooth's location, function, aesthetic importance, and your budget. Here is a side-by-side comparison:
| Feature | Metal | Metal-ceramic | eMax | Zirconia |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appearance | Silver/gold | Tooth-coloured | Most natural | Very natural |
| Strength | Excellent | Very good | Good | Excellent |
| Durability | Very long | Long | Long | Longest |
| Gum line | No dark line | May show grey line | No dark line | No dark line |
| Cost (NPR) | Lowest | Mid-range | Higher | Highest |
| Best for | Back teeth | Front & back | Front teeth | Any tooth |
Getting a dental crown typically requires two appointments at DentaLife:
First appointment — tooth preparation & impression:
Second appointment — crown fitting (1–2 weeks later):
The crown procedure is performed under local anaesthesia, making it completely comfortable throughout. The tooth preparation (shaping) involves no pain — you will feel pressure and vibration from the drill but no sharp sensation while numb.
After the anaesthetic wears off:
A standard dental crown at DentaLife requires two appointments:
If a root canal treatment is needed before the crown, additional appointments are required first. Your dentist will give you a clear timeline at the initial consultation.
With proper care, a dental crown can last many years — potentially a lifetime. However, the actual lifespan depends on the material and how well it is maintained:
The most common reasons crowns fail prematurely:
A dental crown is durable but requires proper care to last as long as possible:
A dislodged or loose crown needs prompt attention — do not ignore it. Here is what to do:
Yes — this is one of the most important things to understand about crowns. A crown covers the visible part of the tooth above the gum line but the tooth root and the natural tooth structure beneath the crown are still vulnerable to decay.
Decay under a crown most commonly occurs at the margin — the junction where the crown edge meets the natural tooth at the gum line. If plaque and bacteria accumulate at this junction and are not cleaned away, decay can develop, eventually undermining the crown and compromising the tooth.
How to prevent decay under a crown:
After root canal treatment, the tooth loses its nerve supply — which means it no longer receives the moisture and nutrients that kept the dentine flexible and resilient. The tooth becomes significantly more brittle and susceptible to fracture under normal biting forces.
A crown after RCT:
Studies consistently show that root-treated teeth without crowns have a significantly higher rate of fracture and loss within a few years — making the crown an essential part of the complete treatment, not an optional add-on.
The best crown after RCT depends on which tooth was treated:
Your dentist at DentaLife will recommend the most appropriate material based on the specific tooth, your bite forces, and your aesthetic preferences.
Booking is quick and easy — choose any of these options:
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