Most dental insurance plans cap annual benefits at $1,000 to $1,500. That ceiling resets every January 1 of each year. Patients who need major work (an implant, a crown, a bridge) often exhaust their entire annual maximum on a single procedure and pay the rest out of pocket. There is a straightforward way to reduce that burden. By scheduling the first phase of a multi-stage procedure before December 31 and the second phase after January 1, you apply two separate annual maximums to the same treatment plan. The result on a $5,000 procedure: $3,000 in insurance coverage instead of $1,500, and $2,000 out of pocket instead of $3,500. This is not a workaround. It is a direct use of how benefit years are structured. My team builds this into treatment planning for every patient who needs major work and has the clinical flexibility to phase it across a calendar year. For a full explanation of how dental insurance annual maximums work and why they are so low, see How Dental Insurance Actually Works (And What It Won’t Cover).

How does the two annual maximums strategy work?

The strategy applies two separate benefit year resets to a single course of treatment. You complete the first phase of a multi-stage procedure before December 31, billing it against the current year’s maximum. You complete the second phase after January 1, billing it against the new year’s maximum. Both maximums apply to the same treatment.
Scenario Total cost 2025 maximum used 2026 maximum used Total insurance pays Your out-of-pocket
All work in 2026 $5,000 $0 $1,500 $1,500 $3,500
Work split across 2025 and 2026 $5,000 $1,500 $1,500 $3,000 $2,000
On a $5,000 procedure, splitting the work across two benefit years saves $1,500. On larger treatment plans, the savings scale accordingly. One additional factor: if you have already met your deductible for the current year, completing the first phase before December 31 means you do not pay the deductible again when the new benefit year begins. That further reduces the total cost of the split-year approach.
how to get the best of dental insurance

Which procedures work best with this strategy?

Multi-stage procedures work best because the clinical phases separate naturally across the calendar year boundary. The treatment is not compressed or altered. It is simply scheduled to align with the benefit reset. Dental implants are the most common candidate. The implant post is placed in the first surgical visit and requires three to four months to integrate with the bone before the crown is attached. Placing the post in November or December and the crown in January or February follows the standard clinical timeline and applies two full maximums. Crowns and bridges work when the tooth preparation and temporary crown placement occur in December and the permanent crown is seated in January. The two-to-three week gap between preparation and final seating aligns naturally with the calendar year boundary. Root canal therapy followed by a crown divides the same way. The root canal completes in one year; the final crown seats in the next. Partial and full dentures allow impressions and framework fabrication in one year with delivery and final fitting in the next. The clinical requirement in all cases is that the two-phase structure makes sense for the tooth and the patient’s condition. The strategy works when the timeline is clinically appropriate. It does not work when it requires rushing or delaying treatment beyond what the situation warrants.
how to get the best of dental insurance

How do I execute the two-year strategy with my dental team?

Three steps, starting in October or November for a December and January treatment split. Step 1: October to November — Consultation and predetermination Schedule a consultation to confirm the treatment plan and get a cost estimate. Ask your dental team to submit a predetermination to your insurance company. The predetermination shows what your plan will actually cover for each phase of treatment, including the UCR rate applied and any exclusions. It is not a payment guarantee, but it confirms the numbers before you commit to the schedule. Step 2: Late November to December 31 — First phase of treatment Complete the first clinical phase before December 31. Your dental office bills this portion against your current benefit year maximum. Confirm the billing date with your team before the appointment. The date of service determines which benefit year applies. Not the date of payment. Step 3: January — Second phase of treatment Once the benefit year resets on January 1, schedule the second phase. Your dental office bills this portion against the new benefit year maximum. The treatment continues on its normal clinical timeline. The coordination between these steps happens at the dental office level. My team manages the predetermination submission, the billing timing, and the treatment schedule together. Patients do not need to manage the insurance side directly.
how to get the best of dental insurance

Frequently asked questions about the two-year dental insurance strategy

Does this strategy work for all dental insurance plans?

It works for any plan with an annual maximum that resets on January 1. Most employer-sponsored PPO plans and individual dental plans follow a January 1 calendar year reset. Some plans follow a different benefit year. Confirm your plan’s reset date before scheduling.

What if my treatment cannot be split into two phases?

Some procedures complete in a single visit and cannot be divided across a benefit year. In those cases, the two-year strategy does not apply. However, if multiple procedures are planned, scheduling separate procedures across two benefit years achieves the same result. Each procedure applies to a different year’s maximum.

Does the strategy still work if I have a deductible?

Yes, and it works better if you have already met your deductible in the current year. Completing the first phase before December 31 avoids paying the deductible a second time in the new benefit year for the first phase. If you have not met your current year deductible, factor that cost into the calculation.

Can my dentist guarantee the insurance will pay as planned?

No. A predetermination provides an estimate, not a guarantee. Insurance companies can change coverage terms or reclassify procedures between the predetermination and the actual claim. Building in a margin above the estimated insurance contribution is the safest approach.
At my Waltham practice, treatment planning for major work always includes a coverage analysis. If the clinical timeline allows a benefit year split, we build it in. Annual maximums have not kept pace with the cost of dental care in decades. Using the full value of what patients have already paid for is not a strategy. It is basic advocacy. If you are considering major dental work in the Boston area and want to understand your coverage options before committing to a timeline, we can help. Serving Waltham, Newton, Brookline, Wellesley, Weston, Lexington, Cambridge, and Greater Boston.
Medical Disclaimer This article provides general educational information and is not a substitute for professional financial or dental advice. Insurance plans vary significantly. Consult with your dental provider and insurance representative for personalized guidance.