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Dental Insurance: Should I buy my own dental insurance? Print E-mail
Written by Vu Le, DDS   
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Dental Insurance: Should I buy my own dental insurance?
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Dental Insurance: Should I buy my own?Medical insurance and car insurance protect you from catastrophes that can bankrupt you.  Rarely do dental crisises cost anywhere near what a medical illness or a injury-involved car accident can.  Because of this, dental insurance isn't critical.  In fact, it's a game that the individual cannot win.


 

Cheaper insurance plans (see HMO vs PPO ) pay out less to the dentist.  The less the payment level, the fewer and poorer choices you have.  Less payment to the dentist means getting a dentist with either lower overhead, or more likely, higher volume.   Higher volume offices have higher square footage(higher rent), more staff (higher payroll) , and therefore more pressure to produce more revenue per patient.  That makes you vulnerable to corner-cutting, excessive treatment and high pressure.

Better PPO insurance plans cost about $100 per person, per month.  In exchange, you get free cleanings and exams, and $1000 to $2000 per year of dental benefits.  The vast majority of our PPO patients use preventative and nothing else.  So you are usually getting about $320 or less of services paid for by the insurance company, and you are always paying out $1200 every year. 

Medical insurance requires large pools of thousands of subscribers to be profitable.  A heart attack can cost over one hundred thousand dollars.  Dental insurance companies are profitable with just one subscriber...they usually pay out less than $300 per year (that's generously assuming people never miss a checkup) they'll never pay out more than $1000 per year, and they always make at least $1200 per year.

Like casino games, dental insurance is a game stacked in the house's favor...you simply cannot win.  



 
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