When people think about health coverage, they tend to focus on the big-ticket categories: hospitalization, specialist visits, prescriptions. Dental and vision coverage rarely get the same attention — even though routine dental and eye care affect daily quality of life more directly than most other health services. That gap in attention translates into a gap in coverage, and eventually a gap in your finances.

The consequences compound quietly. A skipped cleaning becomes a cavity. A cavity becomes a root canal. A root canal without coverage becomes a $1,500 bill. The story with vision isn’t much different — and for older adults approaching or already in Medicare, the stakes are even higher, since Original Medicare does not cover routine dental or vision care at all.

74M Americans currently have no dental insurance coverage
$1,500+ Typical out-of-pocket cost for a root canal without coverage
64% Of adults who skipped a dental visit cited cost as the primary reason

Why Dental Coverage Is Worth Every Dollar

A basic dental plan is built around a simple logic: preventive care is far cheaper than restorative care. Most plans cover two cleanings per year and annual X-rays at or near 100% — and those appointments exist precisely to catch small problems before they become large, expensive ones. Gum disease caught early is managed with a cleaning; caught late, it may require surgery.

Beyond cost, there’s a broader health case for dental coverage. Oral health is closely tied to systemic conditions — untreated gum disease is associated with increased risk of heart disease, complications in diabetes management, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. The mouth is not separate from the rest of the body, and treating dental care as optional reflects a misunderstanding of how interconnected these systems are.

“Preventive dental care pays for itself. Two cleanings a year cost less than one filling — and far less than what comes after you skip the filling.”

For families, the calculation tilts even further toward coverage. Children need orthodontic screenings. Adults in middle age face higher likelihood of crowns and bridges. The premium for a family dental plan is typically modest relative to the exposure it removes from your household budget.

Vision Coverage: More Than Just a New Prescription

It’s tempting to think of vision insurance as useful only if you wear glasses. That framing undersells it considerably. A comprehensive eye exam is one of the few routine health screenings that can detect conditions well outside the eye itself — including high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, early signs of diabetes, and certain neurological changes. Optometrists are often the first clinicians to notice these markers.

Vision plans are typically among the most cost-effective insurance products available. Premiums for individuals often run $10–$15 per month and cover an annual exam plus a meaningful allowance toward glasses or contact lenses. For that premium, you receive an annual health screening and meaningful protection against the cost of corrective eyewear — a straightforward value proposition by any measure.

The Medicare Blind Spot

For adults 65 and older, the dental and vision gap takes on particular urgency. Original Medicare — Parts A and B — does not cover routine dental exams, cleanings, fillings, or extractions. It does not cover routine vision exams or prescription eyeglasses. These are simply not included in the program’s standard benefits.

This is one of the most important gaps to address when planning Medicare coverage. The good news is that several paths exist to fill it:

Medicare Advantage Plans (Part C) are an increasingly popular alternative to Original Medicare, and many include dental and vision benefits as part of the package. Plans vary significantly by carrier and region, so it’s important to compare what’s actually covered — some plans include only preventive dental, while others extend to restorative procedures.

Medicare Supplemental Plans (Medigap) work alongside Original Medicare to reduce out-of-pocket costs, though Medigap plans generally do not include dental or vision — you would typically pair one with a standalone dental and vision policy. Understanding how these layers interact is essential before choosing a coverage structure.

For those managing multiple prescriptions, Medicare Prescription Drug Plans (Part D) address the medication side of the coverage equation. A complete Medicare strategy typically coordinates all three: medical, supplemental or Advantage, and prescription coverage — with dental and vision addressed either through an Advantage plan or a standalone add-on.

A Practical Checklist

Whether you’re approaching Medicare eligibility or shopping for individual coverage, these steps will help you close the gap:

  • Confirm whether your current health plan includes dental and vision, or whether they are excluded and require separate enrollment.
  • If you’re on or approaching Medicare, review whether a Medicare Advantage Plan in your area includes dental and vision benefits.
  • Compare standalone dental and vision plans — premiums are low enough that coverage almost always outperforms self-insuring.
  • Check provider networks before enrolling — confirm your existing dentist and optometrist participate in any plan you’re considering.
  • Watch for waiting periods on dental plans: major restorative work (crowns, bridges) often has a waiting period of 6–12 months, so enroll before you need it.
  • For Medicare beneficiaries pairing a Supplemental Plan with Original Medicare, ask about standalone dental and vision riders or separate policies to round out your coverage.
  • Review Medicare Prescription Drug Plan options annually during open enrollment — formularies change year to year.

The Bottom Line

Dental and vision coverage are not supplemental luxuries — they are foundational parts of a complete health plan. Skipping them doesn’t save money in the long run; it transfers cost and risk to a future version of yourself who didn’t budget for a root canal or a sudden vision correction need.

For Medicare-eligible adults, the stakes are higher still. Original Medicare’s silence on dental and vision isn’t a minor detail — it’s a structural gap that requires a deliberate coverage decision. Whether that means a Medicare Advantage Plan with built-in benefits, a Supplemental Plan paired with standalone coverage, or another configuration depends on your individual situation.

The right coverage structure is specific to you. Exploring your dental and vision options alongside your broader Medicare decisions is where that conversation starts.