Annual maximum
The ceiling on what your plan pays in a year, after which you pay 100%.
What is the annual maximum?
The annual maximum is the hard dollar ceiling on the total benefits a dental insurance plan will pay per covered member in a single benefit year. Once the plan's payments reach this limit, you are responsible for 100% of any additional covered services until the year resets. According to the National Association of Dental Plans, 32.8% of in-network PPO annual maximums fall between $1,000 and $1,500. Unlike health insurance, dental plans have no out-of-pocket maximum, your exposure above the annual maximum is theoretically unlimited. Only the insurer's actual benefit payments count toward the maximum; your deductible, coinsurance, and balance billing amounts do not.
How it works
Each claim is processed and the plan's payment portion is tracked against the annual maximum. When the sum of plan payments reaches the limit, subsequent claims produce an Explanation of Benefits showing $0 plan payment with reason code 'annual maximum reached.' Your deductible and coinsurance obligations still apply to claims that eat into the maximum, the maximum tracks only what the plan pays, not what you pay.
Annual max $1,500. You need a crown ($1,100 UCR, plan pays 50% = $550) and a root canal ($900 UCR, plan pays 50% = $450). Total plan payments: $1,000 of your $1,500 used. You later need a bridge ($2,000 UCR, plan would pay 50% = $1,000, but only $500 of maximum remains). Plan pays $500. You pay $1,500 out-of-pocket for the bridge.
What to watch out for
- One major procedure can wipe out a $1,000 to $1,500 maximum in a single visit. A crown or root canal often exceeds the entire year's benefit. If you face multiple major procedures, completing one in late December and another in January lets each draw from separate annual maximums.
- There is no dental out-of-pocket maximum. Once benefits are exhausted, all costs are yours, there is no 'catastrophic' cap like health insurance provides under the ACA. Budget accordingly for years with multiple major procedures.
Frequently asked questions about annual maximum
Only what the insurance plan actually pays counts. Your deductible payments, coinsurance amounts you pay, and any balance billing from out-of-network dentists do not reduce the annual maximum. If your plan pays $400 on a crown, that $400 counts toward the maximum, your $400 coinsurance share does not.
Potentially yes. Many carriers apply benefits to the date the procedure was initiated, not completed. A crown prep on December 28 and final placement January 8 may allow each stage to draw from separate plan years' maximums. Confirm this in writing with your carrier before relying on it, policies vary.
A small number of plans, including certain Spirit Dental products and some dental discount plans (which are not insurance), advertise no annual maximum. True no-maximum insurance plans typically charge significantly higher premiums. Verify whether you are comparing insurance (reimbursement) to a discount plan (fee reduction only).
On calendar-year plans, yes, January 1. On plan-year (policy anniversary) plans, the maximum resets on your enrollment anniversary date. Some individual plans purchased mid-year reset 12 months from your effective date, not January 1.
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