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Insurance · 5 min read

What Is a Dental Annual Maximum (and Why It Matters)

Your dental plan's annual maximum is the #1 reason for surprise bills. Here's how it works and how to stretch it across major treatment.

MDB

My Dentist Brooklyn Editorial

Independent dental guide · Brooklyn, NY

Q

What is a dental annual maximum and why does it matter?

A dental annual maximum is the most your insurance will pay for your care in one plan year — commonly $1,000 to $2,000. Once the plan has paid out that amount, you pay 100% of any further dental costs until the maximum resets, usually on January 1. It matters enormously because dental maximums are low and haven't kept pace with treatment prices: a single crown (~$1,400 at 50% coverage) or one implant can use up most or all of it, leaving you to cover everything else yourself. This is the number-one reason people get blindsided by dental bills. Two strategies help. First, stage expensive treatment across two calendar years so two separate maximums apply — for example, a crown in December and another in January. Second, request a pre-treatment estimate before major work so you know exactly how much of your maximum remains and what you'll owe.

The simple definition

Your annual maximum is the ceiling on what the plan pays per year. You pay everything above it. It resets each plan year (often the calendar year).

Why it's such a problem

Maximums of $1,000–$2,000 have barely changed in decades while treatment costs rose. The result: one crown or implant can exhaust your whole year's benefit, and anything more is on you.

How it interacts with coverage

Even with 50% "major" coverage, the plan only pays 50% up to the maximum. So a $1,500 maximum means the plan stops at $1,500 paid out, regardless of percentages. Full mechanics in our insurance guide.

Strategy 1: Stage across two years

Split major work so it spans a year boundary — e.g., one crown in late December, the next in early January — to tap two annual maximums. Your dentist can help sequence treatment this way.

Strategy 2: Pre-treatment estimate

Before big procedures, have the office submit a pre-treatment estimate. You'll see exactly how much maximum remains and your out-of-pocket share — no surprises.

When the maximum isn't enough

For large plans, combine insurance with a savings plan, CareCredit, or compare care abroad.

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.