Zirconia vs porcelain crowns — what is actually different
Zirconia is stronger, porcelain looks more natural. Modern materials blur the line. Here is how to choose for your specific case.
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Quick comparison
Side-by-side
- Strength: Zirconia stronger (~1,200 MPa) / Porcelain (~400 MPa)
- Esthetics: Zirconia opaque/strong / Porcelain translucent/natural
- Cost: Zirconia $1,400-1,800 / Porcelain $1,200-1,800
- Best for: Zirconia = back teeth, bruxism / Porcelain = front teeth, esthetics
- Tooth reduction: Zirconia less needed / Porcelain more needed
- Bonding: Both bond well to tooth
- Lifespan: Zirconia 20+ years / Porcelain 15-20 years
When zirconia is right
Choose zirconia when:
- Back tooth needing maximum strength (molar)
- Patient with documented grinding/bruxism
- Tooth with very thin remaining structure (zirconia needs less tooth reduction)
- Implant crown (high stress)
- Replacement for failed PFM where you want a fresh start
- Patient with metal allergies (zirconia is 100% non-metal)
When porcelain is right
Choose porcelain (lithium disilicate / e.max / feldspathic) when:
- Front tooth needing maximum esthetic match
- Premolar with esthetic visibility
- Patient who is concerned about achieving the most natural look
- Crown adjacent to natural teeth where color match matters
- Veneer-style minimal-prep cases
Modern "monolithic" zirconia changes the rules
Newer zirconia materials (2020+) have improved translucency significantly. The old “opaque zirconia look” is gone — modern translucent zirconia can be nearly as esthetic as porcelain for many cases.
This means: more dentists are using zirconia even on front teeth these days. We evaluate case-by-case which material wins for your specific case.
What about gold crowns?
Gold crowns are old-school but still legitimate:
- Longevity: 30+ years easily — outlasts everything else
- Strength: Exceptional for back teeth
- Esthetic: Yellow gold visibility
- Cost: $1,500-2,500 (gold price affects this)
- Best for: Back molars, patients who prioritize longevity over aesthetics
Still occasionally placed for very specific cases where appearance doesn’t matter.
Frequently asked questions
Is zirconia stronger than enamel?
Yes — zirconia is harder than natural tooth enamel. This is good for durability but means a zirconia crown can wear opposing teeth over decades. We bite-balance carefully.
Can zirconia crowns crack?
Rarely. Modern zirconia is extremely fracture-resistant. Catastrophic crown fractures are uncommon (less than 2% over 10 years).
Will my old PFM crown be replaced with zirconia?
Often yes — modern replacement options favor zirconia or e.max over older PFM. We discuss material choice at consultation.
Does insurance care which material?
Typically no — coverage is the same for porcelain, zirconia, and PFM. Some plans don’t cover gold (luxury material).
Can I tell what material my old crown is?
Sometimes from X-rays (metal shows white, all-ceramic shows similar to tooth). Old records help. We document material for every new crown.
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