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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Insurance companies like HSA etc need you to pay your dentist and then collect the receipts. When all the treatment is completed that you want to claim for ask the dentist to complete his/her section on your claim form. You may have to leave it with them and collect the next day. Then you send the claim form with your receipts to the insurance company. And Bob's your uncle. Remember that a lot of insurance companies have a quarantine period so you can't claim anything in the first 1-6 months.
Hope this has helped
Hiya lopper,
Has your friend considered joining a practice which is run with something like DenPlan? Basically you pay a monthly fee as you would with a typical insurance company, within that fee (and this is highly variable) check-ups, scalings and routine fillings, extractions, x-rays as well as root canal fillings are usually covered. Depending on the practice if you require anything that involves lab. work (crowns, bridges, dentures etc..) you then foot the lab. bill, but the actual work in the surgery is covered. You go for an initial assessment and are placed in a 'band' depending on how much existing dental work has been done e.g. if you have 10 fillings you are in a higher band than someone with only 1 or none and so the monthly fee varies accordingly. Might be worth considering, as it could work out cheaper than insurance. Id advise shopping around to get the best deal.
Perhaps I could offer an alternative and cynical view of DenPlan? I'm sure it DOES work well, but it is just an 'captive' insurance policy instead of pay-as-you-go. Since it is the dentist that assesses what 'band' of payment you will be in, the dentist will be assessing the premium that is paid. And the since the scheme has to make a profit, the average man / woman seeing the dentist is paying somewhere in the premium for all those overheads. Now I know that it true of any insurance - you pay your premium in exchange for comfort in case of catastrophre. But the difference with dental care the potential catastrophre is not great - maybe 2x the ANNUAL PREMIUM. If I write off my car (which I don't do very often) my insurer might have a fund 30x my annual premium.
So why do people buy DenPlan?