The (Very) Limited Dental Coverage in Original Medicare
Let me be crystal clear:
Original Medicare (Parts A and B) provides almost no dental coverage. None. Zero. Zilch.
In all our years advising seniors on healthcare, this gap remains one of the most dangerous financial exposures I see. Part A (hospital insurance) only covers dental procedures when they’re an essential part of a covered medical service.
For example, if you need jaw reconstruction after an accident, the dental components of that surgery might be covered.
Part B (outpatient care) is similarly restrictive. It won’t cover your cleanings, fillings, extractions, dentures,
dental implants, or almost anything else you’d normally see a dentist for regardless of how medically necessary those services might be.
Why this gap exists traces back when Medicare was created. Back then, dental care was viewed as separate from “real” healthcare, a distinction that makes zero sense today given what we know about oral health’s impact on overall wellness. Yet despite mounting evidence, this coverage gap persists, leaving millions of seniors financially exposed
.