What is waiting period?
A dental insurance waiting period is the number of months you must be continuously enrolled before the plan will reimburse a given tier of services. Waiting periods exist to prevent adverse selection — people enrolling specifically to claim an expensive procedure and then canceling. Almost all individual PPO plans impose graduated waits: zero months for preventive, three to six months for basic services like fillings, and six to twelve months for major services like crowns, root canals, and bridges. Orthodontic waiting periods are separate and routinely run 12–24 months.
How it works
Your policy's effective date starts the clock. If you have a 6-month basic wait and enroll January 1, your first eligible basic claim date is July 1. Claims submitted before that date for basic procedures will be denied — not reduced, denied entirely. The carrier checks the procedure code (CDT code) against your plan's service category schedule and your enrollment date on every claim.
You enroll January 1 in an individual PPO with standard waits: 0 months preventive, 6 months basic, 12 months major. Your February cleaning is covered 100% — Day 1 preventive. A March filling is denied — 6-month basic wait not met. A crown in April is denied — 12-month major wait not met. Starting July 1, fillings are covered. Starting January 1 of next year, crowns are covered.
What to watch out for
- Orthodontic waiting periods are separate from major service waits. Clearing the 12-month major wait does not mean braces are covered — ortho often carries a 24-month wait. Always ask about Class IV specifically.
- Continuity-of-coverage credit can waive waiting periods if you had prior continuous dental coverage. This waiver is not automatic — you must request it in writing with proof of prior coverage at enrollment. Many patients miss this and serve unnecessary wait times.
Frequently asked questions about waiting period
Yes, but the tradeoff is usually a lower first-year annual maximum, higher premiums, or both. Spirit Dental markets no-wait individual plans with Year 1 maximums starting around $1,000 that step up in Years 2 and 3. Employer group PPOs frequently waive all waiting periods at open enrollment. California eliminated waiting periods for individual plans by law as of January 1, 2025.
Yes. Each new policy starts a fresh waiting-period clock from its own effective date, regardless of how long you had prior coverage — unless you invoke continuity-of-coverage credit at enrollment. Never let coverage lapse between plans if you want to preserve any waiting-period credit.
Most plans have an emergency exception for acute pain relief — a simple extraction or temporary filling to address immediate pain may be covered even during a waiting period. Definitive treatment (a crown, a permanent restoration) is still subject to the full wait. Read your Summary of Benefits carefully for emergency exceptions.
A 12-2-2 structure means: 12-month wait for orthodontics, 2-month wait for basic services, 2-month wait for certain other categories. This is less common than the standard 0-6-12 structure and typically signals an employer group plan or a premium individual product.
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