The post Original Medicare Pays $0 Toward Dental. One Implant Runs $3,000 to $5,000 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 68-year-old retiree walks out of the dentist’s office with a treatment plan: one implant, one crown, total quoted at $4,200. He has been on Original Medicare for three years and assumed the bill would shrink once insurance was applied. It will not. Medicare will pay nothing toward that tooth, and the same question appears again and again in retirement forums: how is dental not covered?
If you have Original Medicare and a dental need beyond a cleaning, this article is for you. If you are on a Medicare Advantage plan with a dental rider, read on. The cap is probably smaller than you think.
Original Medicare was never designed to function as dental insurance. Routine dental care is generally excluded, including cleanings, fillings, extractions, root canals, crowns, dentures, and implants. For most beneficiaries, a visit to the dentist is paid entirely out of pocket, regardless of how long they have been enrolled in Medicare.
There are a few limited exceptions, but they are tied to specific medical situations rather than ordinary dental needs. Medicare may pay for certain dental services when they are required as part of a covered medical treatment, such as an organ transplant, cardiac valve replacement, or some head and neck cancer therapies. The dental work must be medically necessary and directly connected to the covered procedure. Routine care, cosmetic work, and tooth replacement due to normal decay generally remain the patient’s responsibility.
A single implant runs $3,000 to $5,000 per tooth in most U.S. markets, all in (surgical placement, abutment, crown). Those are market estimates, not a Medicare schedule, because Medicare publishes none. Full dentures land in the $1,500 to $4,000 range per arch depending on materials. A single crown runs $1,000 to $2,500. None of it touches Medicare.
To put that in fixed-income context: per capita disposable income hit $68,359 in the first quarter of 2026, and the 2026 Social Security COLA came in at 2.8%. A $4,000 implant represents a significant expense for many retirees living primarily on Social Security and portfolio withdrawals. Healthcare already absorbs 16.8% of total personal consumption expenditures as of April 2026, the second-largest service category after housing. Dental costs sit largely outside the Medicare system and come on top of those expenses.
Most Medicare Advantage plans advertise dental coverage. That is partly why more than half of Medicare beneficiaries now enroll in MA. Read the benefit summary, though, because the rider almost always carries an annual maximum, and the maximum almost always sits below the cost of a single implant.
Typical 2026 MA dental allowances run from a few hundred dollars at the low end to roughly $1,000 to $2,000 per year at the higher end for comprehensive coverage. That ceiling covers cleanings and basic restorative work well. It covers one implant partially, at best. Three additional features tighten the squeeze:
The MA dental extra helps with routine care. On a six-implant treatment plan, it falls far short of dental insurance.
Two moves cover most readers facing a real dental bill:
One more option worth knowing: dental schools and federally qualified health centers offer reduced-fee care, often 30% to 50% below private practice rates, supervised by licensed faculty. The wait is longer. The bill is smaller. For an implant on a fixed income, that tradeoff is the one that often pencils out.
Source note: Medicare premium and deductible figures reflect 2026 plan-year rules published by CMS on November 14, 2025. Dental price ranges reflect market estimates from private practice surveys; Medicare publishes no schedule.
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The post Original Medicare Pays $0 Toward Dental. One Implant Runs $3,000 to $5,000 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


