Missing tooth clause
If the tooth was already gone when you enrolled, the plan won't pay to replace it.
What is the missing tooth clause?
A missing tooth clause is a policy exclusion that denies coverage for the replacement of any tooth that was already absent on or before the policy's effective date. The enforcement is date-anchored and binary: if the tooth was missing on Day 1 of your coverage, replacement prosthetics, implants, bridges, partial dentures, full dentures, are excluded, regardless of how long ago the tooth was lost or why. The clause targets all replacement options, not just implants, and may apply permanently or for a defined look-back period depending on the specific plan.
How it works
When you submit a claim for an implant, bridge, or denture, the carrier reviews your enrollment date against the tooth's extraction or loss date. If the loss predates your effective date, the claim is denied under the missing tooth exclusion. The carrier may request dental records, prior X-rays, or extraction documentation to confirm the loss date. Pre-determination of benefits is strongly recommended before any prosthetic treatment to surface this exclusion in advance.
You lost tooth #19 (lower left molar) in March 2024 via extraction. You enroll in a new PPO January 1, 2025. You request an implant in February 2025. The carrier reviews records, confirms the tooth was missing on your January 1 effective date, and denies the implant claim under the missing tooth clause. An implant costs $3,500 to $5,000 out-of-pocket. A bridge to replace the same tooth is also excluded, the clause covers all prosthetics, not only implants.
What to watch out for
- The clause covers bridges, partials, and dentures, not just implants. Many patients research 'does insurance cover dental bridges' and get a generic yes without understanding their specific missing tooth clause status applies equally to bridges.
- Switching carriers resets the exclusion. If you've been on Delta Dental for years with a tooth missing and switch to Guardian, Guardian's effective date creates a fresh missing tooth clause evaluation for that tooth under the new plan.
Frequently asked questions about the missing tooth clause
Request continuity-of-coverage credit in writing at enrollment, if you had prior continuous coverage that included prosthetic benefits and the tooth was present when that prior coverage started, some plans will honor treatment under the prior plan's terms. This requires documentation and is not automatic. Compare plans specifically for 'missing tooth clause exemptions' before enrolling.
Typically no. Missing tooth clauses target permanent teeth. The loss of a primary (baby) tooth at the appropriate developmental age is expected and not subject to the clause. Congenitally missing permanent teeth (never developed) are a gray area, ask your carrier for a written pre-determination.
Most plans impose a lifetime exclusion for the specific tooth. Some newer individual plans use a 12-month look-back (only excluding teeth lost within 12 months before enrollment). Always read the plan's exclusions section carefully for the exact time frame.
Pre-determination (also called pre-authorization) is the carrier's advance assessment of coverage for a proposed treatment. It is not a payment guarantee but will surface a missing tooth clause denial before you undergo treatment and incur costs. Always request pre-determination in writing for any prosthetic procedure over $500.
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