Now open to all ages · 2026 benefit year

Do you qualify for the Canadian Dental Care Plan?

It's a government plan that helps Canadians pay for dental care. If you don't have private insurance and earn under $90,000, you might qualify. Answer a few quick questions to find out.

  • Free, no sign-up
  • Takes ~60 seconds
  • Find a dentist near you
Check your eligibility

Are you a resident of Canada for tax purposes?

Unofficial estimate. Final eligibility is decided by Service Canada & the CRA. Official site ↗

How CDCP Guide works

1

Check eligibility

We ask the four questions that decide eligibility: residency, tax filing, income, and insurance access. Then you get a clear yes or no with your co-pay tier.

2

Understand your benefits

We explain, in plain language, what's covered, what you'll actually pay, and the 'free isn't always free' gotcha most people miss.

3

Find a dentist

Eligible or not, we connect you with a dentist near you accepting new patients, including ones who bill at the CDCP rate so you avoid surprise charges.

What you'll pay, at a glance

Your co-pay depends on your adjusted family net income. CDCP pays a share of eligible costs:

Adjusted family net incomeCDCP paysYou pay
Under $70,000100%$0
$70,000 – $79,99960%40%
$80,000 – $89,99940%60%
$90,000 or moreNot eligible

Guides & common questions

Plain-language answers to what Canadians actually ask about the CDCP.

Eligibility

Who is eligible for the Canadian Dental Care Plan?

You qualify for the CDCP if all four are true: you're a Canadian resident for tax purposes, you filed last year's tax return, your adjusted family net income is under $90,000, and you don't have access to private dental insurance. The plan is now open to eligible residents of every age.

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Eligibility

Do I qualify for the Canadian Dental Care Plan?

You likely qualify if you're a Canadian tax resident, filed last year's taxes, have adjusted family net income under $90,000, and have no access to private dental insurance. The fastest way to know is to run our free 60-second eligibility check.

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Eligibility

What are the CDCP income limits for 2026?

The CDCP covers people with adjusted family net income under $90,000. Under $70,000, the plan pays 100% of eligible costs; $70,000–$79,999 it pays 60%; $80,000–$89,999 it pays 40%; at $90,000 or more you aren't eligible.

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Coverage & costs

What does the Canadian Dental Care Plan cover?

The CDCP covers a broad range of oral-health services: preventive care like exams, cleanings and x-rays; restorative care like fillings; root canals; extractions and oral surgery; and prosthodontics like dentures. Some services require preauthorization, and coverage is paid against established fees.

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Coverage & costs

Does the CDCP really cover 100%?

If your adjusted family net income is under $70,000, the CDCP pays 100% of eligible costs, but 'eligible' means the CDCP's established fee, which can be lower than what your dentist charges. So even at the 0% co-pay tier you may owe the difference, plus the cost of any non-covered services.

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Coverage & costs

How much is the CDCP co-pay?

Your co-pay is the share of eligible costs the CDCP doesn't pay: 0% if your adjusted family net income is under $70,000, 40% from $70,000–$79,999, and 60% from $80,000–$89,999. On top of the co-pay, you may owe any amount a dentist charges above the CDCP established fee.

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Guides