Intraoral Scanner Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis - Global - 2025-2031
Description
Global Intraoral Scanner Market Report, 2024-2031
Executive Summary
The global intraoral scanner market was valued at over $1.1 billion in 2024 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 9.9% to exceed $2.2 billion by 2031. This strong growth reflects the rapid shift from conventional impression materials to fully digital workflows in restorative dentistry, orthodontics and implantology.
This report covers the complete global intraoral scanner market and analyzes adoption and growth across all major regions. It quantifies unit sales, average selling prices (ASPs), market values, growth rates and company shares, and it examines the technology, clinical practice trends and business models that are reshaping digital dentistry. Historical data to 2021 and forecasts to 2031 allow readers to understand how this market has evolved and where it is heading.
The report scope reflects how intraoral scanners have moved from a niche early adopter tool to a central part of chairside workflows. Clear aligner therapy, same day dentistry, digital implant planning and integrated CAD/CAM systems are now tightly linked to scanner penetration. As more clinics link imaging, design and production, intraoral scanners are often the first capital investment in a broader digital ecosystem.
Market Overview
Intraoral scanners capture direct digital impressions of a patient’s dentition and gingiva, replacing traditional alginate or silicone impressions. The resulting 3D models are used for crowns, bridges, veneers, inlays and onlays, aligners, splints and implant restorations.
Globally, the increasing preference for digital workflows is leading to a steady decline in conventional impression methods. Traditional materials are messy, uncomfortable and prone to errors from bubbles, distortion or poor handling. They also require shipping to a lab and additional time for model pouring and scanning. Intraoral scanners remove many of these steps. They shorten chair time, reduce remakes and allow labs or clear aligner providers to receive a usable file within minutes.
The market is also being driven by a wider adoption of clear aligner therapy. Many aligner cases are now initiated using a scan rather than a physical impression. Digital scans can be stored, compared over time and re-used for refinements. This has made intraoral scanners an important revenue enabler for practices that focus on orthodontics or cosmetic dentistry.
At the same time, scanner performance is improving. Modern devices offer faster capture, lighter handpieces, improved ergonomics and higher resolution. Many systems integrate artificial intelligence to automate margin marking, remove soft tissue, identify caries or highlight tooth wear. These features improve the user experience and speed up the learning curve for new adopters.
The full report suite on the global intraoral scanner market analyzes how these clinical and technical trends interact with regional pricing, reimbursement, practice structures and patient expectations.
Market Drivers
Increasing Demand for Same Day Dentistry
Growing patient expectations for convenience are a major driver of the intraoral scanner market. Same day dentistry allows clinicians to deliver a crown, inlay, onlay or veneer in a single visit, rather than over several weeks.
Chairside workflows rely on fast, accurate digital impressions. Intraoral scanners feed CAD/CAM design software and in-office milling units or 3D printers. While the initial capital outlay is high, clinics that use chairside systems can reduce lab bills, shorten delivery times and differentiate their service offering. This is especially attractive in premium markets such as North America and Europe, where high income levels make patients more willing to pay for speed and comfort.
As more patients become aware of same day solutions, demand for digital workflows will continue to grow, and intraoral scanner penetration will increase as a result.
Productivity Enhancement
Intraoral scanners also help improve productivity for both clinics and labs. Digital impressions eliminate the need for physical models in many cases. Files are transmitted to labs electronically, often through integrated portals or cloud platforms.
This reduces shipping costs, shortens turnaround time and provides a more predictable pipeline of work. For multi-chair practices and dental service organizations (DSOs), digital workflows also standardize impression quality across clinicians and locations. That makes it easier to work with centralized labs or internal production centers and maintain consistent prosthetic outcomes.
The time and cost savings offered by intraoral scanners are an important factor in the business case for adoption. Over the forecast period, clinics that invest in scanners to streamline their workflows are expected to drive sustained unit growth and support ASP stability for premium devices.
Growth of Clear Aligners
The rapid expansion of the clear aligner market is closely linked to intraoral scanner adoption. Clear aligner cases increasingly start from a digital impression, which makes scanners an essential tool for many orthodontic and general practices.
Aligner platforms often provide integrated simulations that show patients their potential treatment outcomes. These visualizations rely on accurate 3D data captured by intraoral scanners. As clear aligner therapy continues to move beyond specialist orthodontists and into general practice settings, more clinicians will need access to a scanner in order to submit and manage cases efficiently.
Align Technology’s Invisalign system is one of the best known examples of this dynamic. As clear aligners grow as a share of orthodontic treatments worldwide, intraoral scanner utilization will rise in parallel.
Market Limiters
Rental Models
One limiting factor for scanner unit sales is the spread of rental and subscription models. Some manufacturers and distributors offer scanners on a rental or pay-per-use basis.
For clinics, this can lower the barrier to entry and reduce upfront capital risk. However, it also means that some practices will opt not to purchase hardware outright. Instead of buying new scanners as their volume grows, they may upgrade within a rental contract or simply keep using an existing device longer. While rental models expand access to digital workflows, they can suppress global unit placements and slow replacement cycles in some segments.
Competitive Pressures
The intraoral scanner market is facing increasing price competition. New entrants, especially from regions with lower manufacturing costs, are introducing scanners at lower price points.
These devices may offer fewer integrations or less advanced software but can be attractive for cost-sensitive clinics. Established brands that rely on premium pricing for their advanced image quality, speed and ecosystem features now have to balance ASPs with competitive pressures. Over the forecast period, this competition is expected to restrain overall revenue growth in some regions, even as units increase.
Required Training
Adoption of scanner technology requires training for dentists, hygienists and assistants. Clinicians must learn how to capture a complete, artifact-free scan and how to integrate digital files into their existing workflows and lab relationships.
For practices with limited staff or high patient loads, dedicating time to training can be challenging. The learning curve may delay adoption or lead to under-utilization of scanners that were already purchased. As software becomes more intuitive and hardware more ergonomic, this barrier will slowly decrease, but training requirements remain an important limiter in the near term.
Market Coverage and Data Scope
Quantitative coverage
Market size and growth by year
Market shares by company
Forecasts to 2031
Units sold
Average selling prices
Qualitative coverage
Growth trends and clinical adoption patterns
Market limiters and pricing pressures
Competitive analysis and SWOT profiles for leading manufacturers
Mergers and acquisitions
Company profiles and product portfolios
Technology and practice trends
Regulatory and workflow factors that shape demand for intraoral scanners
Time frame
Historical data: 2021 to 2023
Base year: 2024
Forecast: 2025 to 2031
Data sources
Primary interviews with industry leaders and key opinion leaders in digital dentistry
Government and professional association data on dentist populations and practice mix
Regulatory and reimbursement data
Private data from dental groups, DSOs and laboratories
Import and export records
iData Research’s internal database and procedure models
Method note
Revenue is modeled from units multiplied by ASP, validated with procedure volumes, scanner utilization assumptions, and installed base data. The analysis takes into account different adoption patterns for premium and value devices and incorporates regional differences in practice structure, clear aligner penetration and chairside CAD/CAM usage.
Markets Covered and Segmentation
While this report suite contains all applicable market data for intraoral scanners, buyers can also access related MedCore reports for adjacent imaging or CAD/CAM segments if needed.
Markets covered:
Intraoral Scanner Market
Global coverage with regional breakdowns for North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East and Africa
Analysis by practice type, including independent clinics, DSOs, specialist practices and academic institutions
Competitive Analysis
The global intraoral scanner market is concentrated among a small group of leading manufacturers, with Align Technology, 3Shape and Envista Holdings taking the top positions in 2024.
Align Technology
Align Technology held the largest market share, anchored by its iTero product line. iTero scanners are tightly integrated with the Invisalign clear aligner workflow, which makes them a natural choice for orthodontic practices and general dentists who treat aligner cases.
The iTero Element and iTero Lumina series offer high speed scanning, advanced visualization and near-infrared imaging for early caries detection. AI-powered tools help clinicians communicate treatment options and progress to patients in real time. Align also works closely with DSOs and large group practices, which further strengthens its installed base and scan volume.
3Shape
3Shape was the second-leading company in the global intraoral scanner market. The TRIOS family of scanners has been a major driver of the company’s growth. Since the launch of the original TRIOS, 3Shape has repeatedly updated its lineup with new models, such as TRIOS 3, TRIOS 4 and TRIOS 5.
TRIOS scanners are widely used in both restorative and orthodontic workflows and are valued for their open architecture and strong software suite. TRIOS 4 introduced timely detection of both surface and interproximal caries, while newer versions focus on improved ergonomics and wireless options. 3Shape also continues to invest heavily in software, reflecting the importance of digital platforms in unlocking scanner value.
Envista Holdings
Envista Holdings ranked as the third-largest competitor after acquiring Carestream Dental’s intraoral scanning business in 2022. This acquisition brought devices such as the CS 3600, CS 3700 and CS 3800 into Envista’s portfolio, now marketed under the DEXIS brand.
These scanners are recognized for their high scanning speed, detailed color capture and AI-driven accuracy. Envista’s strength lies in its ability to tie scanners into its broader digital ecosystem, including Nobel Biocare implant planning tools and KaVo solutions. This makes the company a powerful player in both implantology and restorative dentistry and positions it well to serve DSOs with bundled offerings that combine imaging, diagnostics and treatment planning.
Technology and Practice Trends
Several practice and technology trends will shape the intraoral scanner market over the forecast period:
End-to-end digital workflows
Clinics are moving from isolated digital tools to fully integrated systems that link scanners, design software, milling units, 3D printers and practice management platforms.
AI and automation
Software that automates model cleanup, margin detection, caries identification and treatment simulations reduces the time needed for each scan and lowers the skill barrier for new users.
Cloud connectivity and remote collaboration
Cloud platforms enable easy sharing of scans with labs, aligner providers and specialists. For multi-site practices, cloud storage also simplifies data management and remote treatment planning.
Ergonomics and patient comfort
Weight reduction, smaller tips and faster scanning sequences improve comfort for both operator and patient. This supports greater use in hygiene and recall visits and encourages routine scanning.
Broadening indications
Beyond crowns and aligners, scanners are increasingly used for monitoring wear, recession, erosion and orthodontic relapse. As scanning becomes a standard part of exams, utilization per installed unit will rise.
Geography
This report provides global coverage across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa.
Why This Report
Use this report on the global intraoral scanner market to answer questions such as:
Where is scanner adoption growing fastest and which regions are driving the most incremental revenue between now and 2031.
How intraoral scanners fit into broader digital dentistry strategies, including clear aligners, chairside CAD/CAM and cloud-based lab workflows.
Which clinical and business factors matter most when clinics evaluate new scanners or consider switching vendors.
How pricing pressure, rental models and low-cost competitors are affecting ASPs and replacement cycles.
How leading manufacturers differentiate through software, AI features, ecosystem integration and DSO partnerships.
Where the main risks lie, including slower adoption in cost-sensitive markets and delays due to training requirements or competing capital priorities.
The global intraoral scanner market report from iData Research provides procedure-aware models, company share analysis and pricing detail that can be used to quantify demand, plan product roadmaps, set pricing and contracting targets, and design training and support programs that speed adoption.
About iData Research
iData Research is a premium market intelligence firm headquartered in Canada with offices across North America and Europe.
Over the last 20 years, the company has specialized in device-level sizing, procedure models, pricing trends, and competitive share across MedTech.
Since 2005, iData has supported global OEMs, mid-market innovators, and investors with triangulated data based on units and ASPs, with country-level forecasts and analyst access across Europe, North America, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and APAC.
Reports are available with flexible licensing to fit commercial, strategy, and investment workflows
Executive Summary
The global intraoral scanner market was valued at over $1.1 billion in 2024 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 9.9% to exceed $2.2 billion by 2031. This strong growth reflects the rapid shift from conventional impression materials to fully digital workflows in restorative dentistry, orthodontics and implantology.
This report covers the complete global intraoral scanner market and analyzes adoption and growth across all major regions. It quantifies unit sales, average selling prices (ASPs), market values, growth rates and company shares, and it examines the technology, clinical practice trends and business models that are reshaping digital dentistry. Historical data to 2021 and forecasts to 2031 allow readers to understand how this market has evolved and where it is heading.
The report scope reflects how intraoral scanners have moved from a niche early adopter tool to a central part of chairside workflows. Clear aligner therapy, same day dentistry, digital implant planning and integrated CAD/CAM systems are now tightly linked to scanner penetration. As more clinics link imaging, design and production, intraoral scanners are often the first capital investment in a broader digital ecosystem.
Market Overview
Intraoral scanners capture direct digital impressions of a patient’s dentition and gingiva, replacing traditional alginate or silicone impressions. The resulting 3D models are used for crowns, bridges, veneers, inlays and onlays, aligners, splints and implant restorations.
Globally, the increasing preference for digital workflows is leading to a steady decline in conventional impression methods. Traditional materials are messy, uncomfortable and prone to errors from bubbles, distortion or poor handling. They also require shipping to a lab and additional time for model pouring and scanning. Intraoral scanners remove many of these steps. They shorten chair time, reduce remakes and allow labs or clear aligner providers to receive a usable file within minutes.
The market is also being driven by a wider adoption of clear aligner therapy. Many aligner cases are now initiated using a scan rather than a physical impression. Digital scans can be stored, compared over time and re-used for refinements. This has made intraoral scanners an important revenue enabler for practices that focus on orthodontics or cosmetic dentistry.
At the same time, scanner performance is improving. Modern devices offer faster capture, lighter handpieces, improved ergonomics and higher resolution. Many systems integrate artificial intelligence to automate margin marking, remove soft tissue, identify caries or highlight tooth wear. These features improve the user experience and speed up the learning curve for new adopters.
The full report suite on the global intraoral scanner market analyzes how these clinical and technical trends interact with regional pricing, reimbursement, practice structures and patient expectations.
Market Drivers
Increasing Demand for Same Day Dentistry
Growing patient expectations for convenience are a major driver of the intraoral scanner market. Same day dentistry allows clinicians to deliver a crown, inlay, onlay or veneer in a single visit, rather than over several weeks.
Chairside workflows rely on fast, accurate digital impressions. Intraoral scanners feed CAD/CAM design software and in-office milling units or 3D printers. While the initial capital outlay is high, clinics that use chairside systems can reduce lab bills, shorten delivery times and differentiate their service offering. This is especially attractive in premium markets such as North America and Europe, where high income levels make patients more willing to pay for speed and comfort.
As more patients become aware of same day solutions, demand for digital workflows will continue to grow, and intraoral scanner penetration will increase as a result.
Productivity Enhancement
Intraoral scanners also help improve productivity for both clinics and labs. Digital impressions eliminate the need for physical models in many cases. Files are transmitted to labs electronically, often through integrated portals or cloud platforms.
This reduces shipping costs, shortens turnaround time and provides a more predictable pipeline of work. For multi-chair practices and dental service organizations (DSOs), digital workflows also standardize impression quality across clinicians and locations. That makes it easier to work with centralized labs or internal production centers and maintain consistent prosthetic outcomes.
The time and cost savings offered by intraoral scanners are an important factor in the business case for adoption. Over the forecast period, clinics that invest in scanners to streamline their workflows are expected to drive sustained unit growth and support ASP stability for premium devices.
Growth of Clear Aligners
The rapid expansion of the clear aligner market is closely linked to intraoral scanner adoption. Clear aligner cases increasingly start from a digital impression, which makes scanners an essential tool for many orthodontic and general practices.
Aligner platforms often provide integrated simulations that show patients their potential treatment outcomes. These visualizations rely on accurate 3D data captured by intraoral scanners. As clear aligner therapy continues to move beyond specialist orthodontists and into general practice settings, more clinicians will need access to a scanner in order to submit and manage cases efficiently.
Align Technology’s Invisalign system is one of the best known examples of this dynamic. As clear aligners grow as a share of orthodontic treatments worldwide, intraoral scanner utilization will rise in parallel.
Market Limiters
Rental Models
One limiting factor for scanner unit sales is the spread of rental and subscription models. Some manufacturers and distributors offer scanners on a rental or pay-per-use basis.
For clinics, this can lower the barrier to entry and reduce upfront capital risk. However, it also means that some practices will opt not to purchase hardware outright. Instead of buying new scanners as their volume grows, they may upgrade within a rental contract or simply keep using an existing device longer. While rental models expand access to digital workflows, they can suppress global unit placements and slow replacement cycles in some segments.
Competitive Pressures
The intraoral scanner market is facing increasing price competition. New entrants, especially from regions with lower manufacturing costs, are introducing scanners at lower price points.
These devices may offer fewer integrations or less advanced software but can be attractive for cost-sensitive clinics. Established brands that rely on premium pricing for their advanced image quality, speed and ecosystem features now have to balance ASPs with competitive pressures. Over the forecast period, this competition is expected to restrain overall revenue growth in some regions, even as units increase.
Required Training
Adoption of scanner technology requires training for dentists, hygienists and assistants. Clinicians must learn how to capture a complete, artifact-free scan and how to integrate digital files into their existing workflows and lab relationships.
For practices with limited staff or high patient loads, dedicating time to training can be challenging. The learning curve may delay adoption or lead to under-utilization of scanners that were already purchased. As software becomes more intuitive and hardware more ergonomic, this barrier will slowly decrease, but training requirements remain an important limiter in the near term.
Market Coverage and Data Scope
Quantitative coverage
Market size and growth by year
Market shares by company
Forecasts to 2031
Units sold
Average selling prices
Qualitative coverage
Growth trends and clinical adoption patterns
Market limiters and pricing pressures
Competitive analysis and SWOT profiles for leading manufacturers
Mergers and acquisitions
Company profiles and product portfolios
Technology and practice trends
Regulatory and workflow factors that shape demand for intraoral scanners
Time frame
Historical data: 2021 to 2023
Base year: 2024
Forecast: 2025 to 2031
Data sources
Primary interviews with industry leaders and key opinion leaders in digital dentistry
Government and professional association data on dentist populations and practice mix
Regulatory and reimbursement data
Private data from dental groups, DSOs and laboratories
Import and export records
iData Research’s internal database and procedure models
Method note
Revenue is modeled from units multiplied by ASP, validated with procedure volumes, scanner utilization assumptions, and installed base data. The analysis takes into account different adoption patterns for premium and value devices and incorporates regional differences in practice structure, clear aligner penetration and chairside CAD/CAM usage.
Markets Covered and Segmentation
While this report suite contains all applicable market data for intraoral scanners, buyers can also access related MedCore reports for adjacent imaging or CAD/CAM segments if needed.
Markets covered:
Intraoral Scanner Market
Global coverage with regional breakdowns for North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East and Africa
Analysis by practice type, including independent clinics, DSOs, specialist practices and academic institutions
Competitive Analysis
The global intraoral scanner market is concentrated among a small group of leading manufacturers, with Align Technology, 3Shape and Envista Holdings taking the top positions in 2024.
Align Technology
Align Technology held the largest market share, anchored by its iTero product line. iTero scanners are tightly integrated with the Invisalign clear aligner workflow, which makes them a natural choice for orthodontic practices and general dentists who treat aligner cases.
The iTero Element and iTero Lumina series offer high speed scanning, advanced visualization and near-infrared imaging for early caries detection. AI-powered tools help clinicians communicate treatment options and progress to patients in real time. Align also works closely with DSOs and large group practices, which further strengthens its installed base and scan volume.
3Shape
3Shape was the second-leading company in the global intraoral scanner market. The TRIOS family of scanners has been a major driver of the company’s growth. Since the launch of the original TRIOS, 3Shape has repeatedly updated its lineup with new models, such as TRIOS 3, TRIOS 4 and TRIOS 5.
TRIOS scanners are widely used in both restorative and orthodontic workflows and are valued for their open architecture and strong software suite. TRIOS 4 introduced timely detection of both surface and interproximal caries, while newer versions focus on improved ergonomics and wireless options. 3Shape also continues to invest heavily in software, reflecting the importance of digital platforms in unlocking scanner value.
Envista Holdings
Envista Holdings ranked as the third-largest competitor after acquiring Carestream Dental’s intraoral scanning business in 2022. This acquisition brought devices such as the CS 3600, CS 3700 and CS 3800 into Envista’s portfolio, now marketed under the DEXIS brand.
These scanners are recognized for their high scanning speed, detailed color capture and AI-driven accuracy. Envista’s strength lies in its ability to tie scanners into its broader digital ecosystem, including Nobel Biocare implant planning tools and KaVo solutions. This makes the company a powerful player in both implantology and restorative dentistry and positions it well to serve DSOs with bundled offerings that combine imaging, diagnostics and treatment planning.
Technology and Practice Trends
Several practice and technology trends will shape the intraoral scanner market over the forecast period:
End-to-end digital workflows
Clinics are moving from isolated digital tools to fully integrated systems that link scanners, design software, milling units, 3D printers and practice management platforms.
AI and automation
Software that automates model cleanup, margin detection, caries identification and treatment simulations reduces the time needed for each scan and lowers the skill barrier for new users.
Cloud connectivity and remote collaboration
Cloud platforms enable easy sharing of scans with labs, aligner providers and specialists. For multi-site practices, cloud storage also simplifies data management and remote treatment planning.
Ergonomics and patient comfort
Weight reduction, smaller tips and faster scanning sequences improve comfort for both operator and patient. This supports greater use in hygiene and recall visits and encourages routine scanning.
Broadening indications
Beyond crowns and aligners, scanners are increasingly used for monitoring wear, recession, erosion and orthodontic relapse. As scanning becomes a standard part of exams, utilization per installed unit will rise.
Geography
This report provides global coverage across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa.
Why This Report
Use this report on the global intraoral scanner market to answer questions such as:
Where is scanner adoption growing fastest and which regions are driving the most incremental revenue between now and 2031.
How intraoral scanners fit into broader digital dentistry strategies, including clear aligners, chairside CAD/CAM and cloud-based lab workflows.
Which clinical and business factors matter most when clinics evaluate new scanners or consider switching vendors.
How pricing pressure, rental models and low-cost competitors are affecting ASPs and replacement cycles.
How leading manufacturers differentiate through software, AI features, ecosystem integration and DSO partnerships.
Where the main risks lie, including slower adoption in cost-sensitive markets and delays due to training requirements or competing capital priorities.
The global intraoral scanner market report from iData Research provides procedure-aware models, company share analysis and pricing detail that can be used to quantify demand, plan product roadmaps, set pricing and contracting targets, and design training and support programs that speed adoption.
About iData Research
iData Research is a premium market intelligence firm headquartered in Canada with offices across North America and Europe.
Over the last 20 years, the company has specialized in device-level sizing, procedure models, pricing trends, and competitive share across MedTech.
Since 2005, iData has supported global OEMs, mid-market innovators, and investors with triangulated data based on units and ASPs, with country-level forecasts and analyst access across Europe, North America, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and APAC.
Reports are available with flexible licensing to fit commercial, strategy, and investment workflows
Table of Contents
37 Pages
- Research Methodology
- Step 1: Project Initiation & Team Selection
- Step 2: Prepare Data Systems And Perform Secondary Research
- Step 3: Preparation For Interviews & Questionnaire Design
- Step 4: Performing Primary Research
- Step 5: Research Analysis: Establishing Baseline Estimates
- Step 6: Market Forecast And Analysis
- Step 7: Identify Strategic Opportunities
- Step 8: Final Review And Market Release
- Step 9: Customer Feedback And Market Monitoring
- Intraoral Scanner Market
- 7.1 Executive Summary
- 7.1.1 Global Intraoral Scanner Market Overview
- 7.1.2 Competitive Analysis
- 7.1.3 Regions Included
- 7.2 Introduction
- 7.3 Market Analysis And Forecast
- 7.4 Drivers And Limiters
- 7.4.1 Market Drivers
- 7.4.2 Market Limiters
- 7.5 Competitive Market Share Analysis
- Abbreviations
- Chart 7-1: Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2021 – 2031
- Chart 7-2: Intraoral Scanner Market by Region, Global, 2021 – 2031
- Chart 7-3: Leading Competitors, Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2024
- Figure 7-1: Intraoral Scanner Regions Covered, Global (1 of 2)
- Figure 7-2: Intraoral Scanner Regions Covered, Global (2 of 2)
- Figure 7-3: Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2021 – 2031
- Figure 9-4: Units Sold by Region, Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2021 – 2031
- Figure 9-5: Average Selling Price by Region, Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2021 – 2031 (US$)
- Figure 9-6: Market Value by Region, Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2021 – 2031 (US$M)
- Figure 7-7: Leading Competitors, Intraoral Scanner Market, Global, 2024
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