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Insurance · 7 min read

Dental Savings Plans vs Insurance: Which Is Better?

Dental savings plans and insurance work very differently. Here's how to compare them and decide which saves you more based on your needs.

MDB

My Dentist Brooklyn Editorial

Independent dental guide · Brooklyn, NY

Q

Dental savings plan vs insurance — which is better?

It depends on your needs. Dental insurance pays a percentage of covered care (often 100% preventive, 80% basic, 50% major) but has a low annual maximum ($1,000–$2,000), waiting periods, and monthly premiums; it's best for predictable, ongoing needs and when an employer subsidizes it. A dental savings plan isn't insurance — you pay a small annual fee ($100–$200) for a discounted price list at member dentists, with no annual maximum, no waiting periods, and no claim forms. Savings plans win when you need a major procedure soon (no waiting), when you'd otherwise blow past an insurance maximum, or when you want discounts on things insurance excludes like implants and cosmetic work. Insurance often wins for families needing lots of routine and basic care, especially through an employer. Many people use a savings plan instead of, or alongside, insurance. Compare your expected yearly costs under each before deciding.

How each one works

Insurance collects premiums and pays a share of covered procedures, capped by an annual maximum. Savings plans charge a flat fee and unlock negotiated discounts you pay directly to the dentist — no insurer pays anything.

Side-by-side

FeatureInsuranceSavings plan
Annual maximumYes ($1k–$2k)None
Waiting periodsOften 6–12 moNone
Covers implants/cosmeticRarelyDiscounted
Monthly premiumYesNo (annual fee)
PaperworkClaimsNone

When a savings plan wins

  • You need major work now and can't wait out a 12-month waiting period.
  • Your treatment would exceed an insurance annual maximum.
  • You want discounts on implants, veneers or whitening that insurance excludes.
  • You're uninsured and want instant savings.

When insurance wins

  • An employer pays most of the premium.
  • Your family needs lots of routine and basic care that fits under the maximum.

Do the math

Estimate your year's dental needs, then compute your out-of-pocket cost under each option. For big-ticket items, also weigh care abroad. More context in our insurance guide and no-insurance options.

Editorial note. This guide is general consumer information for Brooklyn and NYC residents, written and reviewed by the My Dentist Brooklyn editorial team. We are an independent resource and not a dental practice. Prices are typical US estimates in dollars and are not quotes. Always consult a licensed dentist for diagnosis and treatment.