Tax Deductibility
Dental premiums may be deductible under the self-employed health insurance deduction (IRC 162(l)).tion.
This is different from the medical expense deduction, which requires itemizing and only applies to expenses exceeding 7.5% of your adjusted gross income. The self-employed health insurance deduction is an above-the-line adjustment, making it one of the more accessible tax benefits for freelancers and solo business owners, subject to the eligibility rules above.
What to Know
Four things that matter most when buying individual dental coverage without an employer.
Annual maximum
Employer group plans commonly offer $2,000 to $5,000 in annual coverage. Individual plans start lower, some as low as $1,000 on entry-level options, but plans like Mutual of Omaha Dental Preferred and Humana Extend 5000 match or exceed the group plan standard. When you are self-employed and do not have paid sick leave, a higher maximum provides more financial cushion if you need an unexpected crown or root canal.
Waiting periods
If you have been uninsured and have treatment you know you need, waiting periods matter more than anything else. Plans with no waiting period on basic services, including Ameritas PrimeStar Care Complete, UnitedHealthcare Primary Dental, Guardian Premier 2.0, and Mutual of Omaha Dental Preferred, let you schedule a filling or extraction the week your coverage becomes effective. Plans with a 6-month basic wait, including Delta Dental PPO and Aetna Dental Direct, are better suited to people whose primary need is preventive care.
Plan year type
Calendar year plans, such as those from Delta Dental, Aetna, and Guardian, reset your annual maximum on January 1. This creates a planning opportunity: schedule one half of a large treatment (such as a crown prep) in November, then the crown placement in January, and use two separate plan years of coverage. Plans tied to your enrollment anniversary, including Ameritas, Mutual of Omaha, and Humana, reset on the date you first enrolled, which still allows similar two-year strategies with different timing.
Network type: PPO vs. DHMO
For self-employed individuals who value flexibility, a PPO is almost always the better choice. PPO plans let you see any licensed dentist, in-network at the negotiated rate or out-of-network with partial coverage. DHMO plans require you to stay within a specific network and often require a primary care dentist referral for specialist visits, which adds friction and limits your options if you travel or move.
Plan Comparison
Seven individual PPO dental plans you can enroll in without an employer — 2026.
| Plan | ~Monthly | Annual Max | Basic Waiting Period | Major Waiting Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delta Dental PPO | ~$75 | $2,000 | 6 months | 12 months |
| UnitedHealthcare Primary Dental | ~$30 | $1,000 | Day one | Not covered |
| Aetna Dental Direct | ~$50 | $1,250 | 6 months | 12 months |
| Ameritas PrimeStar Care Complete | ~$60 | $2,000 (rises to $3,500 in Year 2) | Day one | Day one |
| Guardian Premier 2.0 | ~$70 | $3,000 | Day one | 12 months |
| Mutual of Omaha Dental Preferred | ~$90 | $5,000 | Day one | 6 months |
| Humana Extend 5000 | ~$100 | $5,000 | 3 months | 6 months |
Common Questions
Self-employed dental insurance: tax deduction and coverage questions answered.
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