What is calendar year reset?
A calendar-year reset means your dental plan's deductible, annual maximum, and frequency limits all refresh on January 1, regardless of when you enrolled during the year. This is the most common benefit-period structure for both employer group plans and individual PPO plans. The practical implication is that patients who exhaust their annual maximum in the fall can receive a full reset on New Year's Day — and those who meet their deductible late in the year lose that progress on January 1 and must re-meet it starting fresh.
How it works
On January 1, the carrier's systems reset every member's accumulated deductible to $0, set the annual maximum tracker back to $0 paid, and restore frequency limits (e.g., two cleanings per year). Claims submitted with a date of service on or after January 1 are evaluated against the new year's fresh slate. Claims dated December 31 process against the prior year's counters — even if submitted in January.
You had a filling in June (met your $50 deductible). A crown in November cost the plan $500 of your $1,500 annual max. On January 1: deductible resets to $0 owed, annual max resets to $0 used. January 5 you need another filling — you owe the $50 deductible again before 80% coverage applies. If you had timed that filling for December 31 instead, no deductible applies (already met) and you'd pay only your 20% coinsurance.
What to watch out for
- Plan your expensive procedures strategically around the calendar year. If you've met your deductible and have remaining annual max in Q4, stack as much treatment as possible before December 31. Waiting until January means re-paying the deductible and starting with zero annual max again.
- FSA (Flexible Spending Account) dollars typically expire at the employer's FSA plan year end — often December 31, same as the calendar year. Unused FSA funds are forfeited. Coordinate dental treatment to use FSA dollars before they expire.
Frequently asked questions about calendar year reset
Calendar year plans reset January 1, period. Plan year plans reset on your policy anniversary date — if you enrolled July 1, your year runs July 1 through June 30. Most employer dental plans follow the employer's benefit year, which may not be a calendar year. Individual plans purchased through ACA marketplaces almost always follow the calendar year.
Most PPO plans cover two preventive cleanings per benefit year, tracked against the calendar year. You can get one in January and one in December — both are covered. A third cleaning in the same year is usually out-of-pocket unless you have a diagnosed periodontal condition warranting more frequent cleanings, which some plans cover separately.
On standard plans, unused annual maximum is forfeited — it does not roll over. Some 'rollover' dental plans carry forward a portion of unused benefits (e.g., up to $500) to the next year if you had at least one preventive visit. These are a product differentiator, not standard practice.
Yes. A new policy means a new deductible, even mid-year. If you paid your $50 deductible under your old plan in February and switch plans in June, you owe a fresh $50 deductible under the new plan before it pays coinsurance.
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