| Coverage tier | Typical out-of-pocket |
|---|---|
| PPO dental insurance (major coverage) | Not typically covered |
| Basic / preventive-only plan | Not typically covered |
| No insurance (self-pay) | $300 – $1,000 |
| Dental savings plan (~20% discount) | — |
Price factors
Quote checker
Most confusion about dental pricing comes from different offices bundling costs differently. Here's what a complete quote typically covers — and what's often left out.
Usually included in the quoted price
Often billed separately — ask before you agree
Health stakes
Dental issues rarely resolve on their own — most progress and get harder to treat over time. Here's what's at stake if you delay.
Before you agree
A good dentist won't mind these. Print this list or take a photo before your next visit.
Common questions
Yes — professional whitening uses 25–40% peroxide, while over-the-counter strips use 5–10%. Professional results are faster, more dramatic, and usually more uniform. OTC strips work for mild discoloration but typically can't match professional outcomes.
No — whitening is treated as cosmetic by all major dental insurance plans and isn't covered. The exception is internal whitening for a darkened root-canaled tooth, which some plans treat as restorative.
Most patients have some short-term sensitivity that resolves in 24–48 hours. Patients with existing sensitivity, gum recession, or worn enamel are more affected. Desensitizing toothpastes and lower-concentration touch-up gels reduce the issue.
City coverage
Loading coverage details…