- Medicaid fee-for-service reimbursement for dental care services
- Dental care utilization among children and adults dashboard in Tableau
- National trends in dental care use, dental insurance coverage, and cost barriers (PDF)
- Geographic access to dental care (State fact sheets)
- Oral health and well-being in the United States (State fact sheets)
Dental coverage, access & outcomes
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- Dental care utilization among the U.S. population, by race and ethnicity (PDF) (April 2021)
- Cost barriers to dental care among the U.S. population, by race and ethnicity (PDF) (April 2021)
- Emergency department visits for dental conditions - a snapshot (PDF) (April 2020)
- How competitive are dental insurance markets? (PDF) (November 2019)
- Medicare expansion and dental benefits coverage (PDF) (December 2018)
- Oral health and well-being among Medicaid adults by type of Medicaid dental benefit (PDF) (May 2018)
- Oral health and well-being among seniors in the United States (PDF)(September 2016)
- Barriers to dental care among adult Medicaid beneficiaries: a comprehensive analysis in eight states (PDF) (November 2024)
- Dentist perceptions of adult Medicaid beneficiaries’ attitudes toward oral health (PDF) (November 2024)
- Dentist participation in Medicaid: how should it be measured? Does it matter? (PDF) (October 2021)
- Estimating the impact of Medicaid expansions on dentist supply (PDF) (August 2021)
- Making the case for dental coverage for adults in all state Medicaid programs (PDF) (July 2021)
- Estimating the cost of introducing comprehensive adult Medicaid dental benefits in Florida (PDF) (June 2021)
- Projected supply of dentists in the United States, 2020-2040 (PDF) (May 2021)
- (PDF) (March 2021)
- Estimating the cost of introducing comprehensive adult Medicaid dental benefits in Hawaii (PDF) (February 2020)
- (PDF) (January 2020)
- Main barriers to getting needed dental all relate to affordability (PDF) (April 2019)
- Could dentists relieve physician shortages, manage chronic disease? (PDF)(December 2018)
- Dental benefits coverage increased for working-age adults in 2014 (PDF) (October 2016)
- Understanding the gaps between adult Medicaid beneficiaries and dentists (December 2024)
- Dentists who participate in Medicaid: Who they are, where they locate, how they practice (Webinar) (September 2022)
- Data-driven insights on Medicaid dental care programs: new research from HPI (October 2021)
- Making the case for dental coverage for adults in all state Medicaid programs (July 2021)
- Measuring what matters - a new tool to help assess geographic access to Medicaid dentists in every state (February 2017)
FAQs about dental coverage, access and outcomes
Dental benefits coverage varies by age. For children ages 0-18, 53% have private dental benefits, 38% have dental benefits through Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and 8% do not have dental benefits. For adults ages 19-64, 62% have private dental benefits, 16% have public dental benefits, and 22% have no dental benefits. For seniors ages 65 and older, 33% have private dental benefits, 12% have public dental benefits, and 56% have no dental benefits.
Because dental benefits for adults are optional at the state level, it should be noted that adults and seniors who are covered by public dental benefits may have limited, emergency only, or no coverage depending on their state's adult dental benefit program. See our national trends data & methods report (PDF) for more information.
Source: National trends in dental care use, dental insurance coverage, and cost barriers (PDF) (HPI Report).Dental coverage for adults enrolled in Medicaid varies drastically from state to state. The Medicaid Adult Dental Coverage Checker by the CareQuest Institute for Oral Health identifies where each state’s Medicaid adult dental benefits package falls on a continuum from "no dental benefits" to "extensive benefits."
Source: (CareQuest Institute for Oral Health).
Dentist participation in Medicaid varies by state. There are many ways to measure dentist participation in Medicaid, such as by enrollment in the program or by volume of patients.
Source: Dentist Participation in Medicaid: How Should It Be Measured? Does It Matter? (PDF) (HPI Research Brief).For children ages 0-18, 63% of those with private dental insurance had at least one dental visit in 2022 compared to 44% with public insurance and 20% with no dental insurance. For adults ages 19-64, 53% with private dental insurance had at least one dental visit in 2022 compared to 24% with public insurance and 15% with no dental insurance. For seniors age 65 and older, 75% of those with private dental insurance had at least one dental visit in 2022 compared to 25% with public insurance and 43% with no dental insurance.
Patient age group and dental insurance status also correlates with the types of dental procedures obtained. The types of services that children covered by Medicaid received are comparable to the services received by privately insured children. Among adults, those with Medicaid benefits had higher shares of more invasive services, such as oral surgery procedures, while privately insured adults had higher shares of preventive services.
Sources: Dental care utilization among children and adults dashboard in Tableau.
National trends in dental care use, dental insurance coverage, and cost barriers (PDF) (HPI Report).
(JADA).
The Health Policy Institute has developed a tool for measuring access to dental care using geo-analytics for each state and the District of Columbia. Results report the percentage of publicly insured children living within a 15-minute travel time to at least one Medicaid/CHIP dentist per 2,000 publicly insured children as well as the percentage of overall population living within a 15-minute travel time to at least one dentist per 5,000 population. Data are as of 2015.
Source: Geographic access to dental care (State fact sheets).
In general, White children, adults, and seniors have higher dental care use than Black and Hispanic children, adults and seniors. For all age groups, Hispanics and Blacks are most likely to face cost barriers to dental care.
Source: National trends in dental care use, dental insurance coverage, and cost barriers (PDF) (HPI Report).