Dental Implants28 January 20253 min read

How Much Time Off Work for Implant Surgery?

Most patients need 1–2 days. Heavy-labour workers may need more. Here's realistic planning.

Dr. Ahmed Al-Rashid

Medical Director

Typical time off

  • Desk work: day of surgery + next day = 1 day
  • Customer-facing: 2–3 days to let swelling subside
  • Heavy physical: 3–5 days
  • Full-arch or multiple implants: 4–7 days

First 24 hours

  • Rest, head elevated
  • Cold compresses
  • Soft food
  • Follow pain management plan

Day 2–3

  • Swelling at peak
  • Mild discomfort
  • Desk work usually fine

Day 4–7

  • Swelling resolving
  • Back to normal activity
  • Gym in 1 week (no heavy lifting yet)

What prolongs recovery

  • Smoking
  • Heavy grafting procedures
  • Individual slow healing
  • Infection (rare)

Practical decision guide

Implant planning is a medical and engineering decision. The useful question is not only whether an implant can be placed, but whether the bone, gum, bite, medical history, hygiene routine, and restoration design make it likely to stay healthy.

Check this first

  • CBCT bone volume, gum thickness, sinus or nerve position, smoking/vaping history, diabetes control, and periodontal status.
  • Whether the missing-tooth space needs grafting, sinus lift, temporary teeth, or staged treatment.
  • How the final crown, bridge, denture, or full-arch restoration will be cleaned and maintained.

When to book sooner

  • There is swelling, pus, implant mobility, persistent bleeding, or a bad taste around an implant.
  • A recent extraction site is planned for an implant but no grafting or bone-preservation discussion happened.
  • You have uncontrolled diabetes, active gum disease, heavy smoking, or bisphosphonate/osteoporosis medication history.

Topic-specific notes

  • For implant treatment, ask how bone, gum thickness, bite forces, smoking, diabetes control, and cleaning access affect the plan. A technically placed implant still fails if the long-term maintenance plan is weak.

Questions to ask at the appointment

  • Do I need a CBCT scan, graft, sinus lift, or soft-tissue graft before implant placement?
  • Which implant system is being used, and can replacement parts be sourced long term?
  • How often should this implant be professionally cleaned, and what tools should I use at home?

Dubai patient note

Dubai implant quotes vary because they may or may not include CBCT, surgical guide, grafting, abutment, crown, temporary tooth, sedation, and follow-up. Compare itemised plans rather than headline implant prices.

References

  • International Congress of Oral Implantologists

Medical disclaimer. This article is informational and does not replace professional clinical advice. For a plan specific to your situation, book a consultation with a Paradise Dental specialist.

Ready to Transform Your Smile?

Book your complimentary consultation today and discover what Paradise Dental can do for you.

Get in Touch
CallWhatsAppDirections