Dental, Vision & Hearing Coverage
Original Medicare doesn’t cover routine dental, vision, or hearing care — but you have options.
What Original Medicare Doesn’t Cover
Many people are surprised to learn that Original Medicare (Parts A and B) doesn’t cover most of what we think of as “everyday” healthcare:
- Routine dental cleanings, fillings, crowns, dentures
- Routine eye exams, glasses, or contact lenses
- Hearing exams or hearing aids
The good news: there are several ways to add this coverage.
Option 1: Medicare Advantage Plans
Most Medicare Advantage plans include dental, vision, and hearing benefits at no extra premium. Coverage levels vary by plan — some include only cleanings and exams, while others cover crowns, dentures, and hearing aids with meaningful allowances.
If dental, vision, and hearing are important to you, this is often the simplest path.
Option 2: Standalone Dental, Vision & Hearing Plans
Available alongside Original Medicare and Medicare Supplement plans. These let you keep the doctor flexibility of Original Medicare/Supplement while adding ancillary coverage. Premiums and benefits vary widely.
Option 3: Discount Programs
Some dental and vision discount programs aren’t insurance, but offer reduced rates at participating providers. Useful for occasional needs without committing to a full insurance premium.
What to Look For
When comparing dental, vision, and hearing benefits:
- Annual maximums — how much will the plan pay per year?
- Waiting periods — can you use major benefits right away, or do you have to wait?
- Network — is your dentist or audiologist included?
- Hearing aid allowances — some plans offer $1,000+, others much less
- Vision allowances — how much toward frames and lenses each year?
If dental work, hearing aids, or eye care matter to you, tell us — we’ll help you compare plans where these benefits actually shine. Some plans have great dental but minimal hearing; others are the reverse. The right choice depends on what you actually need.
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