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MorningsideHealth & Risk

DPPO vs. DHMO — what's the difference?

Dental Preferred Provider Organization (DPPO) plans operate like a medical PPO: members can see any dentist but pay less in-network. There's typically an annual deductible ($50–$100), an annual maximum benefit ($1,000–$2,500), waiting periods on major services (6–12 months for crowns, 12–24 months for orthodontia), and coinsurance percentages by service tier (preventive 100%, basic 80%, major 50%). Strongest coverage breadth.

Dental Health Maintenance Organization (DHMO) plans require employees to pick an in-network primary dentist, who refers to specialists. Typically: no annual deductible, no annual maximum, no waiting periods, fixed copays per service. Lower premiums but narrower provider access. Best fit for cost-conscious employers and employees comfortable with smaller networks.

Most NY group plans offer DPPO; DHMO is more common in higher-density urban markets where networks have depth.

Category
Employee Benefits
Audience
Pre-purchase guidance
Topic
Employee Benefits

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