Dental Benefits

Immix Insights • April 2026

Why Dental Benefits Keep Getting More Expensive and What Employers Should Know

Dental coverage remains one of the most valued parts of an employee benefits plan, but it is also one of the areas where employers continue to see cost increases.

Dental coverage remains one of the most valued parts of an employee benefits plan, but it is also one of the areas where employers continue to see cost increases.

Plan sponsors are asking many of the same questions. Why are dental claims rising? How much of the increase comes from new dental fee guides? Is the Canadian Dental Care Plan changing anything for employer-sponsored group plans? And what can employers do to keep coverage sustainable without simply shifting more cost onto employees?

The reality is that dental inflation is being driven by more than one factor. Fee guide increases do matter, but they are only part of the story. Higher utilization, rising practice costs, and more complex treatment patterns are also contributing to growing dental spend.

There is also confusion around the Canadian Dental Care Plan. While it is an important public program, it does not replace employer-sponsored dental coverage and it does not make private plans cheaper for employers.

For employers, the real question is not whether dental costs are rising. It is what is driving those increases, how they affect renewals and long-term plan sustainability, and what options exist to manage them well.

In this article, we look at the 2026 dental fee guides, the other forces driving dental costs upward, why the CDCP does not change the economics of employer plans, and where options like Health Spending Accounts and supplemental coverage come into play.

Why dental costs are rising

Dental costs are rising in 2026 for a few reasons at once.

The first is simple. The cost of delivering dental care continues to increase. Like many health services, dental practices are dealing with higher staffing, supply, equipment, and operating costs. Over time, those pressures show up in treatment costs and, in turn, in dental claims.

The second is utilization. People with dental coverage are more likely to use it, especially for routine and preventive care. That is not a bad thing. In many cases, it means employees are getting the care they need. But it also means total plan spending can rise even when the plan itself has not changed.

Treatment complexity also plays a role. As workforces age and more people stay engaged with regular care, plans may start to see more restorative and major dental work over time, not just cleanings and basic exams. On top of that, advances in technology mean more expensive equipment used in the dental offices.

For employers, that is what makes dental spending harder to predict. Costs can rise even without a major plan design change, because the pressure is coming from several directions at once.

The annual dental fee guide is part of that story, but it is not the whole story. It helps explain why claims move upward, but so do broader inflation, higher utilization, and the growing cost of care. That is why it helps to think about dental inflation as a trend driven by both price and usage, not just by one change in the market.

What the dental fee guide means for dental expenses

The dental fee guide is one of the clearest reasons dental claims rise over time, but it is often misunderstood.

Each province publishes a suggested guide that sets benchmark fees for dental procedures. In Canada, dentists are not required to charge those exact amounts, but the guide still matters because most dental offices adhere to this guide, and most benefit plans use it as the basis for reimbursement.

That means when the fee guide goes up, claim costs often go up with it. Even small increases in common services can add up across a workforce over the course of a year. Consider an exam at $200 in 2021:

BC dental fee guide example from 2021 to 2026
Year BC Fee Guide Increase Dental Cost ($)
2021 Base 200
2022 7.35% 214.7
2023 5.99% 227.56
2024 4.73% 238.34
2025 3.27% 246.14
2026 2.66% 252.69

Factoring in only the fee guide, that same $200 would cost $253 just 5 years later.

The fee guide is not the only reason dental costs rise, but it is one of the easiest places to see how annual inflation begins to move through a benefits plan and eventually affect renewal discussions. This is the basis for a common frustration for employers; seeing dental claims rise when the coverage (i.e. 80%) and annual plan limits (i.e. $2,000) have stayed the same.

Why claims rise even when plan design does not change

One of the most common frustrations for employers is seeing dental claims increase even though the plan design itself has not changed. Coverage levels are the same. Annual maximums are unchanged. Reimbursement percentages look identical year over year. Yet total claims still rise.

The reason is that plan cost is driven by behaviour and usage, not just plan rules.

Dental plans are sensitive to who is actively using the coverage and what type of care they are accessing. Even small shifts in utilization patterns can materially affect total claims across a group.

For example, as employees settle into a workplace and become more comfortable using their benefits, routine care tends to become more consistent. Missed cleanings are caught up on. Long deferred treatment gets addressed. Employees who may not have had coverage before begin to use it regularly. None of this requires a plan change, but it does increase claim volume.

Over time, treatment mix also changes. A workforce that maintains regular preventive care will eventually generate more restorative and major claims. Fillings follow cleanings. Crowns follow fillings. Periodontal treatment becomes more common as employees age. These services cost more than basic exams, even when reimbursement percentages remain the same.

Turnover can amplify this effect. New hires often arrive with unmet dental needs and immediately use coverage. Departing employees may complete major work before giving notice. As the group changes, the pattern of claims changes with it.

The result is that claims pressure can build quietly, driven by utilization and treatment mix rather than plan generosity. From the employer’s perspective, it can feel disconnected from any conscious decision about benefits. The plan looks the same, but the experience inside it has evolved.

This is why dental renewals can increase even in years when nothing appears to have changed. The structure of the plan is stable, but the cost and timing of care within the plan are not.

Canadian Dental Care Plan Mean for Employers—and What Doesn’t It Change?

The Canadian Dental Care Plan has received a great deal of attention, but it does not change the basic economics of employer-sponsored dental coverage.

The CDCP is a public dental program for eligible Canadians who do not have access to private dental coverage. That is an important point, because it means it is not designed to replace employer plans or reduce costs for employers already offering dental benefits.

For plan sponsors, this is where some confusion has crept in. The existence of a public dental program can make it sound like pressure on private plans should ease. In practice, that is not how the program works. Employees who have access to employer-sponsored dental coverage generally are not the people the CDCP is meant to serve.

Employer plans still play a different role in attracting talent, supporting employees, and providing predictable access to care. The CDCP matters in the broader conversation about access to dental care in Canada, but it does not reduce renewal pressure on private plans or make employer dental coverage less relevant.

For employers considering dropping or not implementing dental coverage, it’s worth noting that eligibility for the CDCP is income-tested, restricting access to those under defined income thresholds. Although it improves access to care for low income people, the program’s fee schedule and coverage levels are limited, often falling short of typical dental costs.

What this means for employers

For employers, rising dental costs are not just another line item, they are a signal about the long-term sustainability of the plan.

When claims continue to increase, the impact shows up at renewal. Underwriters typically look ahead, not just back, applying assumptions that anticipate continued growth in claims. The result is often higher costs, more difficult decisions, and increased scrutiny of whether the current plan is still working as intended.

This is where many employers get stuck. They want to provide meaningful coverage and avoid scaling back benefits unnecessarily. At the same time, a pattern of rising claims year after year is difficult to ignore or absorb.

Part of the challenge is that dental pressure is easy to misinterpret. Higher claims do not necessarily mean the plan is too generous. In many cases, they reflect broader factors such as increased cost of care, more consistent utilization, or a shift toward more complex treatment. Often, it is a combination of all three.

That is why employers need more than a renewal number—they need context. An in-depth review should identify what is actually driving the increase, where the pressure is coming from, and whether the plan remains aligned with the needs of the workforce. The goal is not simply to react to rising costs, but to understand them well enough to make informed, sustainable decisions.

How should employers approach rising dental plan costs?

The first step is to review the plan with a clear understanding of what is driving the increase.

That means looking beyond the renewal number. Employers should understand which services are driving claims, whether the plan is tied to the current fee guide or a lagged year, and where cost pressure is building over time. From there, it may make sense to adjust how the plan is structured. In some cases, the answer is not richer coverage. It is better balance.

That could mean reviewing reimbursement levels, annual maximums, coverage for major services, or how often certain services are covered. The right approach depends on the workforce, the budget, and the role benefits play in recruitment and retention.

Health Spending Accounts can also help. They give employers a way to add flexibility without relying only on a traditional insured plan. In the right situation, an HSA can help cover eligible dental expenses while giving employers more control over how dollars are allocated.

Communication matters too. Employees do not always understand how their dental coverage works, what is covered, or where out-of-pocket costs may still apply. Clear communication can help reduce confusion and make the plan feel more valuable.

The goal is not simply to cut costs. It is to build a dental strategy that stays useful, sustainable, and realistic over time.

What individuals can do if dental coverage is limited

When dental coverage is limited, the best next step is usually to look at where the gap actually is.

For some people, the issue is no coverage at all. For others, it is coverage that helps with basic care but leaves larger out-of-pocket costs for more expensive treatment.

In those situations, there may be other options to consider. Health Spending Accounts can help in some cases, especially when flexibility matters more than a traditional one-size-fits-all plan. Individual health and dental plans may also be worth exploring for people who do not have access to employer coverage, or recently lost group coverage. For high dental costs that end up paid out of pocket, in Canada eligible dental expenses can be claimed as part of the Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC) on your personal tax return

The important point is that limited coverage does not always mean there are no options. It usually means taking a closer look at what kind of support makes the most sense for the person, the family, or the business.

How employers can move forward with clarity

Rising dental costs are not the result of a single change, but a combination of factors that build over time—fee guide increases, higher utilization, and the growing cost and complexity of care. For employers, the challenge is not just managing renewal increases, but understanding what is driving them and how the plan should evolve in response. Reviewing recent claims experience, separating price effects (such as fee guide movement) from utilization and treatment mix, and stress-testing plan design choices can help employers make decisions that support both affordability and access to care.

Key takeaways

  • Dental costs rise due to a combination of fee guide increases, higher utilization, and more complex care.
  • Claims can increase even when plan design stays the same, because usage patterns and treatment costs continue to evolve.
  • The CDCP improves access for eligible Canadians but does not replace employer-sponsored coverage or reduce cost pressure on private plans.
  • For employers, the priority is understanding what is driving costs and ensuring the plan remains aligned with workforce needs.
  • For individuals with limited coverage, options such as HSAs or individual plans may help bridge the gap.

FAQ

Does the CDCP replace employer dental coverage?

No. The CDCP is for eligible Canadians who do not have access to private dental coverage, including employer-sponsored plans. It is not a replacement for employer dental benefits, and it does not reduce cost pressure on private plans.

Why can dental claims rise if the plan has not changed?

Because plan cost is influenced by more than plan design. If the cost of care goes up, if employees use their coverage more consistently, or if more claims involve higher-cost treatment, total spending can rise even when the plan structure stays the same.

Does the fee guide control what every dentist charges?

No. The fee guide is a benchmark, not a mandatory price list. Even so, it still matters because many dental reimbursements are tied to it.

Can an HSA help with dental costs?

In some cases, yes. A Health Spending Account can help employers add flexibility by reimbursing eligible medical and dental expenses on a tax-effective basis. That can make it a useful supplement to a traditional benefits plan.

What if someone does not have enough dental coverage?

That depends on the gap. Some people may want to look at an individual health and dental plan, while others may want to supplement existing coverage with another solution. The right answer depends on the person, the family, or the business.

Further Reading

Health Spending Accounts (HSAs)

A primer on how HSAs can reimburse eligible medical and dental expenses, how they are commonly coordinated with insured benefits, and where they may add flexibility.

Next steps: reviewing dental plan sustainability for 2026

If dental claims are increasing, it can help to step back and confirm which factors are driving the change (for example: fee guide movement, utilization, treatment mix, and the cost of care).

A structured review typically looks at plan design (coverage levels, frequency limits, annual maximums, and major services), cost-sharing (deductibles and coinsurance), and supporting strategies such as HSAs or supplemental arrangements. The objective is to keep coverage meaningful for employees while managing long-term affordability for the organization.

For more information or to request a plan review: https://www.immixgroup.ca/contact.php

Howard

Howard Cheung BBA

Employee Benefits Consultant, Immix Group: An Employee Benefits Company A Suite 450 – 888 Dunsmuir St. Vancouver V6C 3K4

Ph 604-688-5559

E info@immixgroup.ca

W www.immixgroup.ca

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A Better Way to Do Benefits

A Better Way to Do Benefits: Independent, Canadian, and Client-First

As an independent, Canadian-owned firm, we’re free to build custom benefits solutions based solely on what’s right for your business.

 

by Lindsay Byrka | B.A., B.Ed, CFP® | Vice President

The Immix Group Employee Benefits is Canadian and Independent

One thing that sets the Immix Group apart—especially in today’s world of frequent mergers and acquisitions—is our independence! We likely don’t talk about it enough, but did you know the Immix Group is a 100% independent, Canadian-owned and operated company? While the name The Immix Group Employee Benefits Ltd. was established in 2010, our roots date back over four decades.

Unlike the majority of our competitors who operate as subsidiaries of large corporations (usually American), we understand what it’s like to run an SMB in Canada.  This means we can relate to the experience of our clients, many of whom are owner-operators. We know they need to focus on their own business. When it comes to their benefits, they need a partner they trust, with expertise, access to the market, and the capability to support the ongoing management of the program.

The Immix Group is an extension of your team

Many of our smaller clients don’t employ HR professionals—or if they do, they prefer those team members to focus on other human resource activities, not benefits administration.

Even for the larger firms we work with who employ robust HR teams, they may not have the bandwidth or desire to administer their benefits, or to delve into understand the intricacies of pricing, plan design elements or other related aspects of an employee benefits program.

So why is it advantageous for SMBs to partner with benefits advisors who also provide administration services?

Because benefits administration doesn’t need to be an added burden for internal teams. With the right support in place, questions get answered faster, errors are avoided, and employees get the help they need—without the runaround.

A small company with around 35 employees had their payroll administrator also managing the benefits plan. While they were an experienced and capable administrator with deep knowledge of the company’s industry, employee benefits were not their area of expertise. Despite basic training on the insurer’s plan admin site, they regularly ran into confusing and complex situations—late applicants, dependent eligibility, billing confusion—and didn’t always know how to proceed.

While the company had an advisor, their role was limited to higher-level items (renewals, plan design changes, escalated situations) rather than the day-to-day. Employees were told to call 1-800 numbers for help, which left everyone frustrated. When the Immix Group came on board, this relieved them of this aspect of their week, freeing them up to focus on other higher-value activities to support the firm.

At Immix Group, we don’t expect your internal team to become benefits experts. That’s our job.

At Immix Group, we handle the daily benefits admin—so your team doesn’t have to. We resolve issues quickly, support employees directly, and keep your plan running smoothly.

For those in our Client Community, if you’re not already taking advantage of the Immix Group’s ability to handle your benefits administration, please reach out! We administer benefits for about 75% of those in our Client Community, but we’d love to see that number reach 100%. Providing daily benefits administration is included when you work with the advisors at the Immix Group; we do not charge additional third-party admin fees.

When it comes to your benefits program, one size does not fit all.

Expertise when it comes to benefits administration is just one part of the equation. Our process most often begins with collaborating with your team to design a program that meets the unique needs of your group of employees.

A mini case study: One of our long-time clients is comprised of nearly 100% women employees. They wanted to address the needs of their staff in a meaningful way, acknowledging that women have unique life experiences and needs. We collaborated with their team- starting with an employee survey- to implement benefits that included enhanced fertility and family planning coverage, additional mental health support (higher practitioner limits, enhanced EFAP with CBT), and a generous flexible spending account open to taxable benefits such as childcare, fitness and kids’ sports fees. On top of this, a robust virtual healthcare program to ensure the many busy moms in their employee base had access to virtual healthcare visits for themselves and their family members, as needed.

Whether it’s getting the right cost sharing formula in place, executive disability coverage, or robust flex spending, fertility and family planning benefits, a program can be tailored to meet your desired outcomes. We believe your benefits program should reflect the values and philosophy of your company, and that in doing so, it enhances culture.

Choosing the right provider for your programs enhances the employee experience

The Immix Group has longstanding and ever-expanding relationships with a myriad of insurance and investment providers. Because we are free to use the full range of industry suppliers, both large and small, this gives us flexibility and freedom to get it right.  

Because the Immix Group is independent, we have the freedom to share the details

When it comes to their group benefits plan, one concern most Canadian business owners have is over-paying for their benefits. There is the perception that insurance is often ‘money down the drain’. This is why transparency matters so much to us; we believe that you should understand where your benefits dollars are going, and the breakdown of premiums and claims.

So how can small and medium-sized businesses ensure they are not overpaying for benefits? By working with providers who are transparent when it comes to the financial details. It doesn’t have to be complicated, rather, it should be clear. We believe that employers should be able to see the financial elements such as where the claims dollars are directed and expenses on the program.

In contrast to how the Immix Group manages our pools, many other providers do not share details.

Despite some progress in the industry with a general movement towards greater transparency, many benefit providers still withhold claims data—especially in pools or association plans. These often come with preset plan designs and pricing that adjusts based on the performance of the overall group, not your individual company. In these cases, you typically can’t customize your plan or access your own claims breakdown.

Without that transparency, it’s hard to make informed decisions. Worse, you may face cost increases that don’t reflect your company’s actual usage.

If you’d like the Immix Group to take a second look at your benefits plan, please reach out! We love to hear from you.

Have questions or ready to take the next step?
Connect with our team today — we’d love to hear from you.

Key Takeaways 

Independent and Canadian-Owned: The Immix Group is 100% Canadian and independently owned, allowing us to prioritize client needs.

Custom-Tailored Plan Design: Unlike many providers, Immix can design flexible benefits programs—including pricing, plan structure, and rate guarantees—tailored to the unique needs of small and medium-sized businesses.

Hands-On Benefits Administration: Immix supports day-to-day benefits administration for clients, helping reduce internal workload, resolve issues quickly, and improve the employee experience.

Transparency for Pricing and Claims Data: The Immix Group believes in full financial transparency, ensuring clients understand where their benefits dollars go—unlike many pooled or association plans that limit access to claims data.

An Extension of your Team: With a high-touch service model and expert advice, Immix acts as an extension of your team, building benefits programs that reflect your company’s values and support your workforce.

FAQ’s

Being independent means the advisor is not tied to a specific insurer or provider. This means access to a broad range of suppliers, and the ability to fully customized benefits programs for our clients.

Some do, the Immix Group does not, and includes ongoing daily benefits administration as part of our high touch service protocol.

Lack of claims data limits your ability to make informed decisions about your benefits plan. It can also result in unfair rate increases. Immix ensures full transparency so you can evaluate performance and adjust your plan accordingly.

Lindsay Byrka

Lindsay Byrka, CFP® BA, BEd

Vice President, Immix Group: An Employee Benefits Company
A Suite 450 – 888 Dunsmuir St. Vancouver V6C 3K4
O  604-688-5262 

E lindsay@immixgroup.ca
W www.immixgroup.ca

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