Dental Benefits in Canada 2025: Group vs Individual

Updated for 2025 · Group plans, individual plans, Canada Dental Care Plan

Dental care is expensive in Canada. A routine cleaning costs $150-$300. A crown can run $1,500-$2,500. Most Canadians rely on employer-provided group dental plans to manage these costs. This guide explains how group dental coverage works, how it compares to individual plans, and what the new Canada Dental Care Plan means for workers.

The Three Tiers of Group Dental Coverage

Most group dental plans are structured in three tiers:

Basic (Preventive) — Typically 80-100% Coverage

Major (Restorative) — Typically 50-60% Coverage

Orthodontics — Typically 50% Coverage with Lifetime Maximum

Common Plan Limits and Structures

FeatureTypical Range
Annual maximum (basic + major combined)$1,000-$3,000 per person
Orthodontic lifetime maximum$1,500-$3,000 per person
Deductible (if any)$0-$50 per person annually
Fee guide usedProvincial dental association fee guide (usually current year or prior year)
Frequency limitsCleaning: 2x/year; full exam: 1x/year; complete x-ray: every 3-5 years
Annual maximum tip: If you need significant dental work (e.g., multiple crowns), plan strategically around your benefit year reset. Splitting treatment across two plan years can double your coverage.

Fee Guides and Balance Billing

Group dental plans reimburse based on provincial dental association fee guides. Your insurer typically pays based on the prior or current year's guide. If your dentist charges more than the fee guide (common with dentists who don't accept assignment), you pay the difference out of pocket in addition to your co-insurance.

Before major work, ask your dentist for a pre-authorization (predetermination). The insurer will tell you exactly how much they'll cover before you incur the cost.

Group vs Individual Dental Plans

FeatureGroup (Employer)Individual
Monthly premiumEmployer pays some or all$50-$150+/month out of pocket
Medical underwritingGuaranteed coverage for eligible employeesMay require health declaration
Annual maximum$1,000-$3,000$750-$2,000 (often lower)
Waiting periodsOften waived (3 months for major work)Often 3-6 months for basic; 12+ months for major
Coverage breadthComprehensive including orthodonticsMore limited; orthodontics rare

Group plans are almost always better value than individual plans when the employer contributes to premiums. The tax-free nature of employer contributions makes them even more valuable.

Canada Dental Care Plan (CDCP)

The federal government launched the Canada Dental Care Plan starting in 2024-2025 for Canadians without employer dental coverage. Key details:

If your employer offers dental benefits, you should enroll regardless of cost to access superior group plan coverage.

Tax Treatment of Dental Benefits

Same rules as group health: employer-paid dental premiums are a taxable benefit in Quebec (RL-1 Box J) but not in other provinces. Employee-paid premiums are eligible for the Medical Expense Tax Credit.

Dental work you pay out of pocket (after insurance) is also eligible for the METC on your personal tax return. Keep all receipts.

How to Get the Most from Your Dental Plan

  1. Submit a predetermination before any major work over $200
  2. Time large expenses across benefit years if needed
  3. Check frequency limits before booking additional cleanings
  4. Keep receipts for out-of-pocket expenses for the METC
  5. Coordinate with spouse's plan to recover remaining co-insurance amounts
  6. Ask about missing tooth clause — some plans exclude teeth that were missing before you joined the plan

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does group dental cover cosmetic procedures?

No. Cosmetic procedures like teeth whitening, veneers for aesthetic purposes, or cosmetic bonding are not covered. Coverage is limited to procedures with a functional/medical purpose.

Can I use my dental benefits for implants?

Many plans cover dental implants under major restorative services at 50%, subject to the major care annual maximum. Pre-authorization is strongly recommended before implant treatment.

What if I change jobs mid-year?

Your annual maximum resets with your new employer's plan. You may be able to claim expenses from your old plan for services before your coverage ended, and from your new plan after enrollment (subject to any waiting periods).

This guide is for informational purposes. Coverage terms vary by plan. Verify details with your benefit booklet or HR department.