
Can You Have Two Dental Plans? Dual Dental
Can You Have Two Dental Plans? Dual Dental Coverage, Primary vs Secondary Rules
Two dental plans can help reduce out-of-pocket costs — but only if you follow the rules. One plan always pays first, the other pays next, and both still apply their own limits.
Below is a clear guide to dual dental coverage, primary vs secondary insurance, and the rules that determine who pays what. This helps patients use benefits correctly and ensures your practice gets paid.
The primary dental plan is the one that pays first. It applies its own deductible, copay, frequency limits, and annual maximum before the secondary plan is even considered.
Who provides it: Usually the patient’s employer plan. When two plans are active, coordination of benefits (COB) determines which is primary.
What it covers: Preventive care (exams, cleanings, X-rays) plus a percentage of basic and major services based on its fee schedule.
What patients owe: Deductibles, copays, and amounts above the plan’s allowed fees. Benefits stop once the annual maximum is used.
Why it matters: The secondary plan will only evaluate what remains after the primary pays. Incorrect primary/secondary order causes denials.
Clear primary vs secondary rules protect patients and prevent delays for your practice.
Secondary dental insurance is the second plan that may help after the primary has paid. It never replaces the primary plan — it only reviews the leftover amount.
Purpose: May help with what the primary doesn’t cover (coinsurance, deductibles, downgrades, frequency issues, or remaining balance).
Not guaranteed:
Some plans do not pay as secondary.
Others use non-duplication or carve-out rules that reduce or eliminate payment.
Requirements: The primary must be active. The secondary follows COB rules to decide if it will pay.
For your team: Always verify both plans and document their rules upfront.
Treatment: Crown – $1,200
Primary benefit: 50% after $50 deductible
Primary payment:
$1,200 – $50 deductible = $1,150 eligible
50% of $1,150 = $575 paid
Balance before secondary: $625
True secondary: May cover part or all of the $625
Non-duplication: May pay $0
Different fee schedule: May reduce payment based on its lower allowed fee
Pro Tip: Always check coordination rules and allowed fees. It prevents surprises.
Dual dental coverage means a patient has two active dental plans at the same time — common with spouses’ employer plans, children covered by both parents, or someone holding both an employer and individual plan.
Dual coverage does not double benefits.
It simply creates an order:
Primary plan pays first
Secondary plan may pay next
To use benefits correctly, always confirm:
Which plan is primary
Coordination method
Annual maximums
Any non-duplication clauses
COB rules determine which plan pays first. Billing out of order leads to denials.
The patient’s own employer plan is primary. Dependent coverage is secondary.
Use the birthday rule:
The parent whose birthday (month/day) occurs first in the year has the primary plan.
If both parents share the same birthday, the plan active the longest is primary.
The plan from the job where coverage has been active the longest is primary.
Medicaid always pays last.
Knowing these rules upfront helps avoid delays and unexpected patient balances.
Step 1: Bill the primary plan first.
Wait for the EOB.
Step 2: Submit the secondary claim with the primary EOB attached.
The secondary plan then:
Reviews what the primary allowed and paid
Applies its coordination method
Pays any eligible remaining amount
No plan will pay above its own allowed fees or beyond its limits.
Verify both plans and their effective dates
Mark primary vs secondary in the record
Note coordination method
Estimate based on allowed fees, not office fees
Always attach the primary EOB when billing secondary
This keeps claims clean and reduces rework.
The secondary plan decides how much (if anything) it will pay.
Pays its normal benefit on its allowed fee, minus the primary payment.
If the secondary would have paid the same or less than the primary → secondary pays $0.
Very common.
Secondary reduces payment so total paid by both plans does not exceed what the secondary would allow.
PPO vs PPO or PPO vs indemnity affects allowed fees.
The lower allowed fee often governs, reducing secondary payment.
Pro Tip: Ask the secondary which method it uses before estimating.

Can You Have Two Dental Plans? Dual Dental Coverage, Primary vs Secondary Rules