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Dr. Ed Weir, Former SSA District Manager
Dr. Ed Weir, PhD Former SSA District Manager · 20 Years Inside Social Security · “Former” Sergeant, USMC LIVE Q&A almost every day on YouTube
The biggest gap in Medicare

Does Medicare cover dental, vision, or hearing?

Twenty years inside Social Security and CMS taught me this is the call I took most often around the kitchen table — folks turning 65 who assumed Medicare worked like the health plan they had at work. It doesn't. Original Medicare doesn't pay for routine dental cleanings, eyeglasses, or hearing aids — and that surprises almost everybody.

Dr. Ed Weir, PhD · 20 years inside Social Security · "Former" Sergeant, USMC
Updated April 2026

Does Medicare cover dental, vision, or hearing?

Does Medicare cover dental, vision, or hearing? Original Medicare generally does not. Routine cleanings, eyeglasses, and hearing aids are excluded by statute, with narrow medical-necessity carve-outs. Some Medicare Advantage plans add supplemental dental, vision, or hearing coverage; benefits and availability vary by plan and service area.

If you want a real human to walk you through what supplemental coverage is available where you live — without trying to sell you anything specific — you have two free options.

Free help from licensed Medicare advisors

Chapter is a free service that connects you with licensed Medicare advisors who can walk through what's available in your zip code, including any supplemental dental, vision, or hearing benefits attached to plans in your area. They are not a plan recommender on this page — they are people you can talk to. Your other unbiased option is your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) at , which provides free counseling and never sells anything.

Call (352) 841-0632 or visit 24help.org/chapter

Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

Here's what I'd do if my mom called me today asking about a cleaning, a new pair of glasses, or hearing aids. Walk through these four steps in order — they'll keep you out of the most common traps.

1. Understand the statutory exclusions

⏱ 10 minutesFree

Read what Medicare actually says about dental, vision, and hearing on Medicare.gov. The exclusions are written into the Social Security Act at 42 USC 1395y(a)(7) and (a)(8). Understanding the rule keeps you from getting talked into something you don't need.

Medicare.gov dental coverage ›

2. Map your alternatives

⏱ 20 minutesFree

List the gap you actually need to fill: routine cleaning, denture work, glasses, cataract follow-up, hearing exam, hearing aids. Different gaps have different alternatives — Medicaid (if you're a full dual), VA (if you're service-connected), an ACA Marketplace dental plan, FEHB carryover for federal retirees, a community health center, or a dental school clinic. Knowing your gap narrows the search.

Find a community health center (HRSA) ›

3. Talk to SHIP or a licensed Medicare advisor

⏱ 30-45 minutesFree

Call your State Health Insurance Assistance Program at for unbiased counseling, or use the free Chapter service at the top of this page to talk with a licensed Medicare advisor about what's available in your zip code. Both are free; neither one will pressure you.

SHIP locator ›

4. Watch the carve-out edges

⏱ Same dayFree

Don't assume "medically necessary" gets you around the dental exclusion — it doesn't, except in narrow cases tied to a covered medical procedure (organ transplant, head/neck cancer, certain cardiac surgeries). For vision, Medicare pays for one pair of corrective lenses or contacts after cataract surgery with an intraocular lens implant. For hearing, a doctor-ordered diagnostic exam can be covered, but routine exams and hearing aids are not.

Medicare.gov post-cataract eyewear ›

What Original Medicare actually covers, in numbers.

$0 (excluded by statute) Routine dental cleanings covered by Original Medicare
1 pair, post-cataract with IOL Eyeglasses after cataract surgery (statutory carve-out)
$0 (excluded by 42 USC 1395y(a)(7)) Hearing aids covered by Original Medicare
20% after Part B deductible Part B coinsurance on covered carve-outs

Which of these sounds more like you?

People come to this page asking very different questions. Pick the one that sounds most like you — the answer changes a lot depending on which gap you're trying to fill.

I just need a routine cleaningOr a filling, or a crown — something not tied to a covered medical procedure

Original Medicare won't pay for this. Routine dental — cleanings, fillings, crowns, dentures, extractions not tied to a covered medical procedure — is excluded by 42 USC 1395y(a)(7). It doesn't matter how necessary it feels. The statute is the statute.

What actually exists for routine dental: standalone private dental insurance, an ACA Marketplace dental plan, FEHB dental for federal retirees, a community health center on a sliding scale, a dental school clinic, or supplemental dental coverage that some Medicare Advantage plans include (benefits and availability vary by plan and area). SHIP at and the Chapter advisor at the top of this page can both walk you through what's available where you live.

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this — "medically necessary" written on a dental claim doesn't get around the exclusion. The carve-out is for dental work tied to a covered medical procedure (organ transplant, head/neck cancer radiation, certain cardiac surgeries), not for ordinary dental disease.

I'm having cataract surgery and need glassesThe post-cataract eyewear carve-out

This is the one big vision benefit Original Medicare gives you. After cataract surgery with an intraocular lens implant, Part B helps pay for one pair of corrective lenses (eyeglasses or contact lenses) from a Medicare-enrolled supplier. You pay the standard 20 percent Part B coinsurance after the deductible.

It's one pair, post-cataract — not annual eyewear, not progressive lenses for everyday refractive error. If you replace the lenses or upgrade frames, the upgrade portion is on you. Make sure the supplier is enrolled in Medicare before you walk out.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

I've seen people leave the optical shop without using the post-cataract benefit because they didn't know it existed. Ask the surgeon's office to flag it before discharge. The benefit is statutory — it's been there since 1986.

I think I need hearing aidsWhat Medicare covers vs. what it doesn't

Original Medicare doesn't cover hearing aids or the routine exams to fit them. The exclusion is in 42 USC 1395y(a)(7) and it's been there since the program started. What Medicare does cover: a diagnostic hearing exam ordered by your doctor to evaluate a medical problem (sudden hearing loss, dizziness, balance issues). That's Part B at 20 percent coinsurance after the deductible.

Options for the aids themselves: some Medicare Advantage plans include a hearing aid benefit (benefits and availability vary by plan and service area), VA pathways for service-connected veterans, state-specific assistive-device programs, over-the-counter hearing aids (FDA approved a category in 2022 for adults with mild-to-moderate loss), and direct private purchase. SHIP at can help you find what's available locally.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom — the over-the-counter hearing aid market changed in 2022 and prices vary widely. An audiologist or your primary doctor can tell you whether your hearing loss is in the range OTC aids can address. That's a medical question, not a coverage question.

I'm thinking about a Medicare Advantage plan for the dentalHow the supplemental benefits actually work

Some Medicare Advantage plans include supplemental coverage for dental, vision, or hearing aids. Benefits, networks, annual maximums, and plan availability vary by plan and service area. "Supplemental" means it's added on top of Part A and Part B — it isn't a separate insurance product you buy, it comes attached to the plan you enroll in.

Things to ask before you assume a benefit will cover what you need: what's the annual dollar maximum for dental, what's covered (preventive only, or also restorative work), is there a waiting period, is your dentist in the network, and how does the plan handle out-of-network providers. Don't take the marketing summary as the rulebook — read the Evidence of Coverage. SHIP at or a licensed advisor (Chapter at the top of this page) can read it with you.

20 years at Social Security taught me this

Most people don't realize the supplemental dental allowance can be used up by one crown. Annual maximums on supplemental dental tend to be smaller than what stand-alone private dental plans offer. Look at the annual cap before you decide it solves your dental problem.

I have Medigap — doesn't that cover dental?What Medigap actually does (and doesn't)

No. This is the most common confusion I run into. Medigap (Medicare Supplement Insurance) fills cost-sharing gaps in Original Medicare — the Part A deductible, Part B coinsurance, foreign travel emergency in some lettered plans. It does not add coverage Original Medicare doesn't already have.

If Original Medicare doesn't cover routine dental, vision, or hearing aids, Medigap doesn't either. To fill those gaps, you'd need a separate stand-alone dental, vision, or hearing product, supplemental MA-plan coverage if you switch from Original Medicare to a Medicare Advantage plan, or one of the alternative pathways (Medicaid for full duals, VA for service-connected, FEHB carryover, community health centers, dental schools).

Don't get caught by this

Don't get caught by this — a Medigap policy and a stand-alone dental policy are two different products. If a salesperson tells you Medigap covers dental, walk away. SHIP at or a licensed advisor can sort out what's what without selling you anything.

I'm low income — can Medicaid help?Full duals often get dental/vision/hearing through Medicaid

If you're a full Medicare-Medicaid dual eligible, your state's Medicaid program may cover routine dental, vision, and hearing services that Medicare won't. Adult dental coverage in Medicaid is a state option, so what's covered varies a lot from state to state — some states cover comprehensive adult dental, some only emergency extractions, some don't cover adult dental at all.

To find out what your state covers, contact your state Medicaid agency or call SHIP at . If you aren't enrolled in Medicaid yet but think you might qualify, ask SHIP about Medicare Savings Programs (QMB, SLMB, QI) too — those are a separate Medicaid pathway that helps pay Medicare premiums and cost-sharing.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom — Medicaid eligibility rules vary by state and change yearly. The phone call to SHIP or your local Area Agency on Aging is the fastest way to find out where you stand without doing a deep state-by-state read.

I'm helping my parent figure this outBystander helping a parent or family member

Most of the calls I take on this topic come from adult children, not from the beneficiary themselves. A daughter notices her mom's hearing has gotten worse but mom won't admit it. A son finds a stack of dental bills his dad's been hiding. Helping makes sense — the rules are confusing and the alternatives are scattered across different programs.

What to gather before the conversation: the parent's current Medicare coverage (Original Medicare with or without Medigap, or a Medicare Advantage plan), their state of residence (Medicaid rules vary), VA service history, and which gap actually matters (cleaning vs. extraction vs. glasses vs. hearing aids). Then The decision stays with your parent. You're doing the legwork.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom — if your parent has cognitive decline that affects decision-making, the SHIP counselor can talk to you on their behalf with verbal consent on the call. For larger decisions, durable power of attorney for healthcare or finances may be worth a separate conversation with an elder-law attorney.

None of these is quite my situationOr you have a less common scenario — dental tied to organ transplant, oral surgery for cancer, VA dental questions, FEHB carryover

Some less common scenarios have their own rules: dental work tied to an organ transplant, head/neck cancer treatment, or certain cardiac surgeries can be covered when it's medically inseparable from the covered procedure. VA dental coverage for service-connected veterans follows separate VA rules. Federal retirees may have FEHB dental and vision (FEDVIP) coverage that carries into retirement. Children of working-age beneficiaries with disabilities have their own dental pathways through Medicaid CHIP.

The fastest way to sort out an unusual scenario is to The Chapter advisor at the top of this page is also free and works with licensed Medicare advisors who can walk through whatever your situation is.

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom

I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom — if your situation involves a service-connected VA disability, a federal pension, or active cancer treatment, the right answer often pulls from rules I haven't covered here. Make the call.

Other coverage that fills the dental, vision, or hearing gap

Original Medicare won't cover routine dental, vision, or hearing — but other programs sometimes will. Here's where to look.

Medicare

You may qualify for Medicare at age 65, or earlier with a qualifying disability, ESRD, or ALS. Original Medicare (Parts A and B) excludes routine dental, vision, and hearing aids by statute, with narrow medical-necessity carve-outs.

Medicaid (full dual eligibility)

If you're enrolled in both Medicare and full Medicaid, your state's Medicaid program may cover routine dental, vision, or hearing services that Medicare doesn't. Adult dental coverage in Medicaid is a state option, so what's covered varies state by state. You may qualify based on income, resources, and state-specific rules.

Medicare Savings Programs (QMB, SLMB, QI)

These Medicaid-administered programs help pay Medicare premiums and cost-sharing for people with limited income and resources. They don't directly add dental, vision, or hearing coverage, but in many states QMB-level enrollment opens the door to fuller Medicaid benefits that may include those services. You may qualify based on income and resource limits.

VA Health Care

Veterans with service-connected dental conditions, certain disability ratings, or qualifying service histories may qualify for VA dental benefits. VA also covers vision care and hearing aids for eligible veterans. Eligibility is determined separately from Medicare.

FEHB / FEDVIP (federal retirees)

Federal retirees may continue Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) coverage into retirement, and may also enroll in FEDVIP for stand-alone dental and vision. FEDVIP is a separate program from FEHB and from Medicare. You may qualify based on federal service history.

ACA Marketplace dental plans

Stand-alone dental plans are available through HealthCare.gov and state-run ACA Marketplaces, sometimes bundled with health coverage and sometimes separate. Anyone can buy a Marketplace dental plan during open enrollment regardless of Medicare status. Premiums and benefits vary.

Everything people ask me

Does Medicare cover routine dental cleanings?

No. Original Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover routine dental cleanings, fillings, crowns, dentures, root canals, or extractions when those services aren't tied to a covered medical procedure. The exclusion is in the Social Security Act at 42 USC 1395y(a)(7). Some Medicare Advantage plans include supplemental dental coverage; benefits and availability vary by plan and service area.

When does Medicare pay for dental work?

Original Medicare can pay for dental services when they're medically inseparable from a covered procedure. Examples: extractions before kidney transplant or before radiation for jaw cancer, certain dental work tied to head and neck cancer treatment, and reconstruction of the jaw after accidental injury. CMS has expanded the dental carve-outs in recent years to include certain organ transplants and cardiac valve surgeries; the scope continues to evolve. The dental work has to be inseparable from the medical procedure — it can't just be "my dentist says I need this."

I'm having cataract surgery — will Medicare pay for my new glasses?

Yes — one pair. After cataract surgery with an intraocular lens implant, Part B helps pay for one pair of corrective lenses (eyeglasses or contact lenses) from a Medicare-enrolled supplier. You pay the standard 20 percent Part B coinsurance after the deductible. The benefit covers one pair after the surgery, not annual eyewear, and not progressive lenses for ordinary refractive error. If you upgrade frames or add coatings, the upgrade portion is on you.

Does Medicare cover hearing aids?

No. Original Medicare does not cover hearing aids or the routine exams to fit them. The exclusion is in 42 USC 1395y(a)(7) and has been in place since the program started in 1965. What Medicare does cover is a diagnostic hearing exam ordered by your doctor when there's a medical reason — sudden hearing loss, dizziness, balance issues. That diagnostic exam falls under Part B at 20 percent coinsurance after the deductible.

Do Medicare Advantage plans cover dental, vision, and hearing?

Some do. Many Medicare Advantage plans include supplemental coverage for dental, vision, or hearing aids; benefits, networks, annual maximums, waiting periods, and plan availability vary by plan and service area. Don't assume the marketing summary tells the whole story — read the plan's Evidence of Coverage to see the annual dollar maximum, what's covered, and which providers are in-network. SHIP at or a licensed advisor (Chapter at the top of this page) can read the plan documents with you.

Does Medigap cover dental, vision, or hearing?

No. Medigap (Medicare Supplement Insurance) fills cost-sharing gaps in Original Medicare — the Part A deductible, Part B coinsurance, foreign travel emergency in some lettered plans — but it does not add coverage that Original Medicare doesn't already have. Since Original Medicare excludes routine dental, vision, and hearing aids, Medigap does not pay for those services either. To fill those gaps, you'd need a separate stand-alone product or one of the alternative pathways described on this page.

What about Medicaid? Will it cover dental if I'm dual eligible?

Maybe — it depends on your state. Adult dental coverage in Medicaid is a state option. Some states cover comprehensive adult dental for full duals, some cover only emergency extractions, and some don't cover adult dental at all. Vision and hearing coverage also varies. To find out what your state covers, contact your state Medicaid agency or call SHIP at . If you aren't enrolled in Medicaid yet, ask SHIP about Medicare Savings Programs too.

Are there low-cost alternatives if I can't afford private dental insurance?

Yes, several. Federally qualified community health centers (find one at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov) provide dental care on a sliding fee scale based on income. Dental school clinics at accredited dental schools offer reduced-cost cleanings, fillings, and other services performed by supervised students. Discount dental plans (not insurance) negotiate lower fees with participating dentists. Local health departments and nonprofit free clinics sometimes offer dental days. None of these is Medicare; they're community resources that exist alongside it.

I'm a veteran — can the VA help with dental, vision, or hearing?

It depends on your VA eligibility. Veterans with service-connected dental conditions, 100% disability ratings, certain qualifying service histories (former POW), or specific dental classifications may qualify for VA dental care. VA also provides vision and hearing aid services for many enrolled veterans. VA eligibility is determined separately from Medicare, and the two can coexist. Call your VA medical center or 1-800-MyVA411 (1-800-698-2411) to ask about your specific eligibility.

Where can I get unbiased help sorting this out?

Two free options. Your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) at provides one-on-one Medicare counseling from trained volunteers; SHIP doesn't sell anything. The Chapter advisor at the top of this page is a free service that connects you with licensed Medicare advisors who can walk through what's available in your zip code. Both services are free. Neither will pressure you. If you want a non-Medicare option, your local Area Agency on Aging often has benefits specialists who can help with dental and prescription assistance programs.

Sources

Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026-04-28.

  1. Original Medicare does not cover routine dental services (cleanings, fillings, dentures, extractions) by statutory exclusion at 42 USC 1395y(a)(7).medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  2. Medicare may cover dental services that are medically inseparable from a covered medical procedure (e.g., extractions before kidney transplant or radiation for jaw cancer).medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  3. After cataract surgery with an intraocular lens implant, Part B helps pay for one pair of corrective lenses (eyeglasses or contact lenses) from a Medicare-enrolled supplier.medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  4. Original Medicare does not cover hearing aids or routine exams to fit them; the exclusion is statutory at 42 USC 1395y(a)(7).medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  5. Part B covers diagnostic hearing and balance exams when ordered by a physician to evaluate a medical condition (e.g., sudden hearing loss, dizziness, balance issues).medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  6. Part B services subject to coinsurance generally cost the beneficiary 20% of Medicare-approved amounts after the Part B deductible is met.medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  7. Some Medicare Advantage plans include supplemental coverage for dental, vision, or hearing aids; benefits, networks, annual maximums, and plan availability vary by plan and service area.medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  8. Medigap (Medicare Supplement Insurance) policies fill cost-sharing gaps in Original Medicare but do not add coverage that Original Medicare does not provide; therefore Medigap does not cover routine …medicare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  9. Adult dental coverage in Medicaid is a state option; what's covered for adult Medicaid enrollees varies substantially by state, from comprehensive coverage to emergency-only to no adult dental …macpac.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  10. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) provide dental services on a sliding fee scale based on income; locations searchable at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov.findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  11. Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) and Federal Employees Dental and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP) are available to qualifying federal retirees; FEDVIP is administered by OPM and is separate …opm.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  12. VA dental care is available to veterans with service-connected dental conditions, 100% disability ratings, certain qualifying service histories (former POWs), and other specific eligibility …va.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  13. The State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) provides free, unbiased one-on-one Medicare counseling; the national SHIP locator phone number is .shiphelp.org(verified 2026-04-28)
  14. FDA established a regulatory category for over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids in 2022 for adults with perceived mild-to-moderate hearing loss; OTC hearing aids do not require a prescription, …fda.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
  15. Stand-alone dental plans are available through HealthCare.gov and state-run ACA Marketplaces during open enrollment; eligibility is not limited by Medicare enrollment status.healthcare.gov(verified 2026-04-28)

Not filing for yourself?

Helping a parent or spouse figure out their dental, vision, or hearing options? Most people I talk to are helping someone — a daughter calling about her dad's hearing aids, a son trying to find his mom a dental plan that covers an extraction. Start with the same four steps. The decision is theirs but you can do the research.

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Chapter Advisory, LLC (“Chapter”) is a private health insurance agency. In California, Chapter does business as Chapter Insurance Services (Lic. No. 6003691). Chapter is not affiliated with or endorsed by any government entity. While Chapter has a database of every Medicare plan option nationwide and can help you to search among all options, it has contracts with many but not all plans. As a result, Chapter does not offer every plan available in your area. Currently, Chapter represents 50 organizations which offer 18,601 products nationwide. You can contact a licensed Chapter agent to find out the number of products available in your specific area. Please contact Medicare.gov, 1-800-Medicare, or your local State Health Insurance Program (SHIP) to get information on all of your options. Enrollment in a plan may be limited to certain times of the year unless you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period or you are in your Medicare Initial Enrollment Period.