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3D Printed Precision Surgical Guides You Can Trust. At Scale.

Produce accurate, surgery-ready implant guides with one efficient workflow. Deliver consistent results across every case while increasing throughput and reducing manual effort in a safer working environment.

Built for Accuracy, Throughput, and Workflow Efficiency

Accuracy

Precision You Can Trust

Achieve true-to-design accuracy with high dimensional stability and tight tolerances. Ensure every guide reflects the intended implant position consistently across cases.

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High-Throughput Production​

Print dozens of surgical guides in a single unattended build. Scale production without increasing labor or complexity.

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Biocompatible, Surgery-Ready Material​

Produce guides using MED610-DSG™ transparent, rigid, biocompatible resin that is FDA-registered and CE-marked, designed specifically for surgical applications.

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Unattended, Low-Touch Workflow

Load the tray, start the print, and return to completed parts. No constant monitoring or manual intervention required.

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Consistent, Repeatable Results

Print identical guides directly from digital files with reliable accuracy, enabling predictable outcomes and easy reprints.

Accuracy

Achieve true-to-design accuracy with high dimensional stability and tight tolerances. Ensure every guide reflects the intended implant position consistently across cases.

3 arrows pointing right symbol

Print dozens of surgical guides in a single unattended build. Scale production without increasing labor or complexity.

medical cross symbol

Produce guides using MED610-DSG™ transparent, rigid, biocompatible resin that is FDA-registered and CE-marked, designed specifically for surgical applications.

hands free symbol

Load the tray, start the print, and return to completed parts. No constant monitoring or manual intervention required.

identical teeth with checkmark symbol

Print identical guides directly from digital files with reliable accuracy, enabling predictable outcomes and easy reprints.

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One Workflow for Every Surgical Guide Type  

Tooth-Supported Guides​
Accurate, stable guides for predictable implant placement.​

Tissue-Supported Guides​
Reliable fit and structural integrity for edentulous cases.​

Bone-Supported Guides​
Precision guides for complex surgical procedures.​

Stackable Guides​
Multi-part guides that align accurately for advanced workflows​.

How 3D Printed Surgical Guide Production Methods Compare

 

Factor

PolyJet® / DentaJet®

SLA

DLP 

Best Lab Fit

Growth-focused, scalable, mixed-case production

Lower-volume, high precision guides 

Lower-volume, fast turnaround guides

Accuracy

High accuracy and repeatability; true-to-design

Clinically acceptable; affected by shrinkage and post-cure variability

Clinically acceptable; affected by shrinkage and post-cure variability

Build Capacity

up to 61 full-arch guides 

6-8 full-arch guides

3-8 full-arch guides

Multi-Material Capabilities

Yes; guide, model, gingival mask on one tray

Single material

Single material

Print Workflow

Unattended through build completion

Manual touchpoints required

Manual touchpoints required

Post Cure Required

No

 Yes

Yes

Support Material

SUP711TM gel-like support fully encases each part

Guide resin forms support bars/matrix at selected touchpoints

Guide resin forms support bars/matrix at selected touchpoints

Cleaning/Support Removal

Clean, mark-free water wash; caustic soda

Mechanical removal and IPA required; may leave marks

Mechanical removal and IPA required; may leave marks

Hazardous Waste 

Minimal; aqueous waste may require controlled disposal

Contaminated IPA; regulated disposal

Contaminated IPA; regulated disposal

Ready-to-Use Resin

Yes

Resin-dependent; agitation may be required

Resin-dependent; agitation may be required

Choose Stratasys DentaJet® for production-scale surgical guide workflows that require consistent accuracy, high build capacity, and the ability to print complete implant case components in one unattended build.

Choose an SLA or DLP system for lower-volume or chairside guide production when smaller batches, single-material output, and additional manual post-processing fit your workflow.

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A Simpler, Scalable Surgical Guide Workflow

Move from design to finished guide with fewer steps and minimal manual effort:

  • 1-Click Nesting – Automatically arrange and support multiple guides in a single build
  • Unattended Print & Cure – Print fully formed, high-precision guides in one run
  • Automated Water-Based Cleaning – Remove support material without hazardous chemicals or damage

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Consistent Surgical Guide Accuracy Across Every DentaJet System

​J3 & J5 DentaJet®​
Produce accurate, biocompatible surgical guides with the same materials and precision. Ideal for labs scaling production with a compact, efficient system.

DentaJet® XL​
Designed for higher-volume production with 4X larger resin cartridges, enabling longer uninterrupted runs and improved cost efficiency with fewer material changeovers.

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Resin Built for Surgical Guides

MED610-DSG™ is a transparent, rigid, biocompatible material designed for guided surgery​

  • FDA-registered, CE-marked (Class I) ​
  • High dimensional stability for precise fit ​
  • Clear for improved visibility during procedures ​
  • Strong and durable for clinical reliability​
  • Compatible with J3, J5, and DentaJet XL​​

Trusted for Accuracy, Scale, and Reliability

Explore Customer Success Stories
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“The doctor needs to trust the device to place the implant exactly as it was planned… I'm able to print 30 tooth-borne guides or complex stackable guides at the same time and know that each part is accurate every time.” -Bret Royal, Implant Concierge

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“When we print stackable surgical guides, the components literally snap together as soon as the support material is washed off. That level of precision simply wasn’t achievable before, and it’s allowed us to take on cases we might have outsourced in the past." -Cameron Kelly, Ambridge Ceramics

3diemme-logo

“This technology is very reliable, especially for making surgical guides with sleeve holes, where we have to be sure that the dimensions of the holes are reproducible over time and absolutely accurate with respect to the source files.”​ -Alessandro Motroni, 3Diemme

implant-concierge-logo

“The doctor needs to trust the device to place the implant exactly as it was planned… I'm able to print 30 tooth-borne guides or complex stackable guides at the same time and know that each part is accurate every time.” -Bret Royal, Implant Concierge

ambridge-ceramics-logo

“When we print stackable surgical guides, the components literally snap together as soon as the support material is washed off. That level of precision simply wasn’t achievable before, and it’s allowed us to take on cases we might have outsourced in the past." -Cameron Kelly, Ambridge Ceramics

3diemme-logo

“This technology is very reliable, especially for making surgical guides with sleeve holes, where we have to be sure that the dimensions of the holes are reproducible over time and absolutely accurate with respect to the source files.”​ -Alessandro Motroni, 3Diemme

FAQ

A: 3D printed dental surgical guide is a custom, patient-specific device used to help dentists place implants exactly according to a digital treatment plan. Designed from CBCT scans and intraoral scans, the guide fits securely on the teeth, tissue, or bone and directs the position, angle, and depth of the implant drill during surgery.

The workflow typically includes digitally planning implant placement, designing the guide in CAD software, and 3D printing it in a biocompatible resin. The finished guide acts as a physical transfer of the virtual plan, helping clinicians achieve more accurate, predictable implant placement with greater consistency.

For dental labs, the accuracy of the printer, the dimensional stability of the material, and the post-processing workflow all play a critical role in guide fit, sleeve stability, and overall surgical precision. High-precision 3D printing technologies like PolyJet™ are commonly used to produce transparent, surgery-ready guides with tight tolerances and repeatable results.

A: 3D printed surgical guides are significantly more accurate than freehand implant placement because they physically guide the position, angle, and depth of the implant drill according to a pre-planned digital workflow. While freehand implant placement relies entirely on clinical judgement, guided surgery transfers the digital treatment plan directly to the patient through a custom guide.

Multiple studies have shown that guided implant placement results in substantially lower positional and angular deviation compared to freehand surgery. In controlled studies, guided implant placement commonly achieves sub-millimeter deviations at the implant apex and significantly more accurate angulation than freehand placement. Freehand implant placement can produce 2–3 times greater deviation depending on case complexity and operator experience.

This higher level of accuracy is especially important near critical anatomical structures such as nerves, sinuses, and adjacent teeth, where even small positional deviations can impact surgical outcomes. Guided workflows also improve consistency across complex cases, including full-arch, edentulous, and stackable-guide procedures.

The final accuracy of a 3D printed surgical guide depends on the entire digital workflow, including scan quality, treatment planning, printer calibration, material stability, and post-processing. High-precision 3D printing technologies and biocompatible surgical guide materials help ensure accurate fit, stable sleeve positioning, and reliable transfer of the digital plan to surgery.

A: Many types of dental surgical guides can be 3D printed, making guided implant surgery more accurate, predictable, and customizable for different clinical situations. Modern dental 3D printing workflows support everything from single-tooth implant guides to complex full-arch surgical cases.

Common types of 3D printed surgical guides include:

- Tooth-supported guides — designed to seat on existing teeth for highly stable and accurate implant placement in partially edentulous patients
- Mucosa-supported guides — used for fully edentulous arches and full-arch implant procedures such as All-on-X workflows
- Bone-supported guides — placed directly on bone during complex surgical procedures or cases involving bone reduction
- Pilot-drill guides — guide only the initial drill position and angulation before the remaining sequence is completed manually
- Fully guided surgical guides — control the complete drilling sequence and implant placement for maximum precision and consistency
- Stackable guides — multi-part guides used in advanced full-arch and immediate-load workflows
- Single-unit and short-span guides — compact guides for one or several implants
- Sinus-lift and bone-reduction guides — designed for advanced implant and oral surgery procedures
- Endodontic access guides — used to guide burs during difficult endodontic procedures and calcified canal access

These guides are typically designed using CBCT and intraoral scan data, then 3D printed in biocompatible materials with high dimensional accuracy and stability. The precision of the printer, material, and post-processing workflow all contribute to accurate fit and reliable surgical performance.

A: DentaJet® printers use MED610-DSG™, a transparent, rigid, biocompatible resin specifically designed for 3D printed dental surgical guides. MED610-DSG is FDA-registered and CE-marked as a Class I medical device material for dental surgical applications.

The material is engineered for high dimensional stability, accuracy, and precision, helping produce surgical guides that fit reliably and transfer the digital implant plan accurately during surgery. Its transparent appearance improves visibility during procedures, while its strength and impact resistance support stable guide performance throughout drilling and implant placement.

MED610-DSG is compatible with the J3 DentaJet®, J5 DentaJet®, and DentaJet® XL 3D printers and is commonly used to produce tooth-supported, tissue-supported, bone-supported, and fully guided implant surgical guides.

Key material properties include:

Biocompatible transparent resin
FDA-registered and CE-marked (Class I)
High dimensional stability for accurate fit
Flexural strength: 70–85 MPa
Tensile strength: 40–55 MPa
Excellent impact resistance

The combination of material stability and PolyJet printing precision helps produce surgery-ready guides with consistent, repeatable results.

A: The number of surgical guides that can be printed in a single build depends on the guide size, tray layout, and whether the build includes additional implant components. With DentaJet® printers, dental labs can produce significantly more guides per build than many traditional single-material dental 3D printers while also printing complete implant cases in one unattended workflow.

For example, a full DentaJet tray can print up to 61 full-arch surgical guides in approximately 3.5 hours unattended. Labs can also use DentaJet’s multi-material capabilities to produce complete implant cases in a single build, including the surgical guide, implant model, and gingival mask together. A full tray can produce up to 16 complete implant cases in approximately 14 hours.

Many conventional dental 3D printing platforms are limited to printing only one material at a time, meaning surgical guides, models, and gingival masks must be produced in separate print jobs with additional handling and material changeovers. Research studies on other systems commonly show batches of only 3–4 guides per build, often focused on measurement testing rather than production throughput.

Because DentaJet printers combine high-capacity trays, unattended operation, and simultaneous multi-material printing, labs can efficiently scale surgical guide production while reducing manual intervention and consolidating multiple implant workflow components into a single print run.

A: MED610-DSG™ is an FDA-registered and CE-marked Class I biocompatible dental resin designed specifically for 3D printed surgical guides. The material is intended for clinical dental surgical guide applications and is compatible with the DentaJet® series of PolyJet dental 3D printers.

Its biocompatibility and regulatory status help support safe intraoral use during guided implant procedures, while its high dimensional stability and strength help maintain accurate fit and reliable surgical performance. MED610-DSG is commonly used to produce transparent, surgery-ready guides for tooth-supported, tissue-supported, bone-supported, and fully guided implant workflows.

In addition to its regulatory certifications, MED610-DSG offers:

Biocompatible clear resin formulation
High dimensional stability for precise guide fit
High flexural and tensile strength
Excellent impact resistance for clinical durability

These properties make MED610-DSG well suited for producing accurate, repeatable surgical guides in professional dental laboratory and clinical workflows.

A: Post-processing for surgical guides printed on a DentaJet® printer is relatively minimal compared to many traditional resin-based 3D printing systems. Because PolyJet™ technology produces fully cured parts during printing, the workflow primarily consists of support removal, cleaning, inspection, and sterilization preparation.

Typical DentaJet surgical guide post-processing includes:

* Removing the guide from the build tray
* Removing the gel-like support material using a waterjet or water-based cleaning system
* Rinsing and inspecting the guide for any residual support material in sleeves, channels, or undercuts
* Disinfecting or sterilizing the guide according to the material instructions for use (IFU) and clinical protocol

Unlike many SLA or DLP workflows, DentaJet guides do not require lengthy IPA washing cycles or separate UV post-curing steps to achieve final material properties. This helps reduce manual handling, simplify production, and improve consistency across parts.

The streamlined workflow also helps reduce the risk of damaging delicate guide features during post-processing. In many labs, the process is essentially: remove from tray, clean support material, inspect, and prepare for clinical use.

Because DentaJet printers support unattended printing and efficient batch cleaning, labs can process large volumes of surgical guides with minimal touch time while maintaining accurate, surgery-ready results.

A: Stackable surgical guides snap together accurately because they are digitally designed with built-in registration and alignment features that allow each component to seat in only one precise position. These guides use keyed geometries, indexed surfaces, pins, stops, sleeves, or other anti-rotation features to create a repeatable, stable fit between guide layers.

In a stackable workflow, the first guide establishes the reference position on the teeth, mucosa, or bone. Additional guides are then designed around the same digital reference so they align precisely with the previous component during surgery. Some systems also use fixation pins, screws, or magnets to further stabilize the stack during drilling or bone reduction procedures.

The “snap fit” is typically a controlled positive fit rather than a loose click connection. Tight tolerances, flat mating surfaces, and precise printed geometry help ensure the guides fully seat without rocking or shifting.

Because stackable guides rely on highly accurate connection surfaces, printing precision is critical. Surface distortion, warping, or inconsistent post-processing can affect seating accuracy between guide layers. High-precision 3D printing technologies like PolyJet™ help produce smooth surfaces, stable geometries, and repeatable fit, allowing stackable surgical guides to assemble consistently and maintain alignment throughout complex implant procedures.

A: Sleeve hole tolerances stay consistent across large print batches by controlling the entire digital manufacturing workflow, including printer calibration, material behavior, part orientation, and quality control procedures. For surgical guides, consistency is critical because even small dimensional variations can affect sleeve fit, drill guidance, and implant positioning.

High-precision dental 3D printing workflows maintain repeatable sleeve tolerances by using:

* Calibrated printers with stable dimensional accuracy
* Consistent guide orientation across every build tray
* Validated CAD compensation offsets for sleeve holes
* Controlled material and support settings
* Standardized cleaning and post-processing procedures

Because printed holes can vary slightly from nominal CAD dimensions, dental labs typically apply validated compensation values during guide design to ensure the final sleeve fit remains accurate after printing. Production labs also keep key variables fixed—including printer, resin, orientation, and workflow settings—to maintain repeatability from batch to batch.

In high-volume production, quality control is equally important. Labs commonly inspect sample guides or test sleeve insertion from each batch to confirm proper fit and dimensional stability before release.

High-precision 3D printing technologies like PolyJet™ help maintain consistent sleeve geometries across large batches by minimizing dimensional drift, material shrinkage variation, and surface distortion. This level of repeatability is especially important for fully guided and stackable surgical guide workflows where accurate drill positioning depends on precise sleeve alignment.

A: Yes, surgical guides can be reprinted from the same digital file, allowing dental labs to reproduce the same guide design, implant positions, sleeve locations, and drill offsets whenever needed. This is one of the major advantages of a digital implant workflow compared to traditional analog processes.

In a validated workflow, the original CAD or STL file can be reused to manufacture replacement guides or duplicate cases with highly repeatable results. However, true repeatability depends not only on the digital file itself, but also on the printer technology and manufacturing workflow used to produce the guide.

High-precision 3D printing technologies like PolyJet™ are designed to produce true-to-design parts consistently by maintaining tight dimensional accuracy and repeatable material behavior across builds. Printer calibration, layer consistency, material stability, build orientation, and post-processing all influence how closely a reprinted guide matches the original.

Lower-precision or less stable printing systems can introduce small dimensional variations that affect guide seating, sleeve fit, and drill tolerances between prints. That is why professional dental labs standardize their printer settings, material workflow, orientation strategy, and quality control procedures to maintain repeatability across batches.

When the full workflow is controlled properly, DentaJet® printers and MED610-DSG™ material can reliably reproduce surgical guides with highly consistent fit, geometry, and clinical performance from the same digital file.

Ready to Scale Your Surgical Guide Production?

Talk to a dental expert to find the right setup for your lab.​