Dental disease and injuries are often covered; routine cleanings usually require a wellness add-on.
Accident-and-illness plans typically cover dental work tied to disease or injury — extractions for periodontal disease, a fractured tooth, or oral infections — as long as it isn't pre-existing and you've met any dental requirements.
A routine, preventive cleaning under anesthesia (often $500–$1,500) is considered preventive care and is usually only covered if you add a wellness/preventive plan.
Many insurers also require proof of an annual dental exam or recent cleaning to keep dental illness coverage active, so read the dental clause carefully.
When dental cleaning is handled as a covered, non-pre-existing condition, your insurer reimburses your chosen plan percentage after the deductible. Here's how a roughly $1,500 bill breaks down across the three most common plan levels:
| Plan level | Insurer pays you back | Your out-of-pocket |
|---|---|---|
| 70% reimbursement | $875 | $625 |
| 80% reimbursement | $1,000 | $500 |
| 90% reimbursement | $1,125 | $375 |
Worked example on a $1,500 bill, after a $250 annual deductible, assuming a covered (non-pre-existing) condition within your annual limit. Most pet plans let you choose your reimbursement rate and deductible — higher reimbursement means a higher monthly premium.
Check whether your plan covers dental illness and whether a wellness add-on is worth it for routine cleanings — the vet cost estimator shows typical dental prices.
Try next: Is pet insurance worth it? · Reimbursement calculator · Vet cost estimator · More coverage questions
Dental disease and injuries are often covered; routine cleanings usually require a wellness add-on.
Yes. Pet insurance never covers pre-existing conditions, so enrolling while your pet is young and healthy is when coverage is broadest and cheapest.
After your deductible, the insurer reimburses your plan percentage (commonly 70%, 80%, or 90%) up to your annual limit. Use the reimbursement calculator to see the exact figure for any bill.
Almost always. Most plans impose a short accident waiting period (often a few days), a roughly 14-day illness waiting period, and sometimes a longer wait (up to six months) for orthopedic conditions. A claim for anything that began during a waiting period is denied.
Yes — this is exactly the kind of detail that differs between companies. Two plans at a similar price can handle dental cleaning very differently, so compare the actual policy wording, not just the monthly premium.
You pay the vet directly, then submit the itemized invoice and your pet's medical records to the insurer, usually through an app or web portal. Approved claims are reimbursed to you, typically within a few days to a couple of weeks.