When a tooth is badly decayed, cracked, or infected, most patients are given two options: save it with a root canal, or remove it with an extraction. It's a decision that should be thoroughly thought on it — mostly because patients aren't explained clearly enough what each option actually involves, and what happens after.
Here are the pro and cons to help you understand what your dentist is weighing when recommending one over the other.
A root canal treatment removes infected or damaged tissue from inside a tooth (the pulp), cleans and disinfects the inner canal, then seals it — usually followed by a crown to protect and restore the tooth's strength and functionality.
Goal: Keep your natural tooth in place.
An extraction removes the entire tooth from its socket. This is usually recommended when a tooth is too damaged, infected, or beyond saving like cracked tooth.
Goal: Remove the source of pain or infection, usually followed by a discussion about replacement options (implant, bridge, or denture) if the tooth is in a visible or functional area.
| Root Canal | Extraction | |
|---|---|---|
| Keeps natural tooth | Yes | No |
| Typical treatment time | 1–3 visits | Single visit |
| Recovery | Mild sensitivity for the first few days | A few days to a week; longer for surgical extractions |
| Follow-up needed | Usually a crown | Often a replacement (implant/bridge/denture) if tooth is functionally important |
| Long-term cost | Higher upfront, but avoids replacement cost | Lower upfront, but replacement costs add up later |
Your dentist will recommend root canal when:
Most patients are surprised to learn that a modern root canal, done properly, feels very similar to getting a regular filling — not the painful reputation it used to have.
Extraction tends to be recommended when:
This is the part that changes the real cost comparison.
This is why a root canal, despite a higher upfront cost, is often the more economical option long-term when the tooth is salvageable — the extraction "savings" can disappear once replacement is factored in.
Both procedures are done under local anesthesia, so you shouldn't feel pain during either. Mild soreness for a few days afterward is normal for both, managed with regular painkillers.
Honestly — you can't tell from symptoms alone. Pain level doesn't reliably indicate whether a tooth is salvageable. It comes down to an X-ray and a clinical exam: how much healthy tooth structure remains, how much bone support is left, and whether the infection can be fully cleaned out.
Is a root canal always possible if I want to save my tooth?
No — if too much of the tooth or supporting bone is gone, a root canal last long, and extraction becomes the more realistic option
Is extraction cheaper overall?
Usually cheaper upfront, but if the tooth needs replacing afterward (implant, bridge, or denture), the total cost is often higher than saving the tooth would have been.
Can I just leave a gap after an extraction instead of replacing the tooth?
For back teeth not visible when you smile, some patients choose not to replace them — but neighbouring teeth can shift over time, and it may affect your bite. Your dentist can advise based on the specific tooth's location.
How long does a root canal take to heal?
Most patients feel normal within a few days; the crown placement afterward completes the restoration.
The only way to know for certain is a proper exam and X-ray — trying to guess based on pain level alone often leads to the wrong decision. Our team in Seri Kembangan will walk you through both options honestly, including the long-term cost picture, before you decide.
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