While the direct cost of remakes is easy to identify, the indirect operational impact is often far greater. Understanding where remakes originate and how to systematically reduce them is essential to building a scalable, efficient restorative workflow.
As a national laboratory supporting thousands of clinicians, DDS Lab sees a clear pattern. Most remakes are not material failures. They are preventable workflow failures.
The financial impact of remakes extends well beyond materials and lab fees. Each remake introduces downstream consequences that affect the entire organization.
Hidden costs include:
Industry estimates often place fully burdened chairtime costs at $500 to $600 per hour. When remakes require additional appointments, those costs escalate quickly, particularly in high production environments.
For DSOs, these costs multiply across locations, turning isolated issues into system wide performance gaps.
Most remakes are not clinical failures. They are workflow failures. Inconsistent processes and incomplete data are the most common contributors.
Frequent causes include:
Without standardized workflows, these issues become repeatable and costly.
In removable workflows, traditional analog processes that require multiple try ins and manual adjustments can further increase remake exposure and variability.
As digital dentistry continues to scale, data quality has become the new standard of care. Laboratories depend on accurate, complete digital inputs to deliver predictable outcomes.
Best practices for digital success include:
For DSOs, digital consistency is critical to reducing variability and maintaining quality at scale.
When digital workflows are standardized and executed consistently, remake rates decline and first pass success improves measurably.
Preparation design remains one of the most controllable variables in remake prevention.
Key considerations:
Standardizing preparation criteria across providers significantly improves first pass success.
DDS Lab’s technical teams routinely support practices in restoration driven prep alignment to reduce preventable redesigns and remakes.
Many remakes are caused not by execution, but by misalignment between the practice and the lab.
Opportunities to improve include:
Digital collaboration tools, including DDS Lab’s Design Vault™, further reduce interpretation errors by enabling real time case review and structured feedback prior to fabrication.
For DSOs and multi site organizations, remake reduction requires system level solutions rather than individual fixes.
Effective strategies include:
When remakes are measured and managed, they become preventable rather than accepted.
Laboratory selection plays a critical role. Consistent manufacturing processes, digital integration, and quality controls directly influence remake performance across an organization.
Remakes are not an inevitable cost. They are a signal. Practices that address workflow gaps, standardize digital inputs, and strengthen lab collaboration consistently reduce remakes while improving efficiency and patient outcomes.
Digitally manufactured removable workflows provide a clear example. DDS Lab’s 3D Printed Denture process has yielded a 1.3 percent lab fault remake rate, demonstrating how controlled digital production and standardized workflows materially reduce variability.
For DSOs in particular, the opportunity is significant. Fewer remakes mean more available chairtime, improved margins, and a better experience for patients and providers alike.
The path forward is clear. Invest in systems, not rework.
Learn how DDS Lab’s digital removable workflow reduces remakes and operational friction →