Level 6Daily Life

Going to the Dentist in Quebec

Limited public coverage, private insurance, and real dental costs.

By VIEAUQC — La vie au QuébecMay 3, 2026
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Dentiste au Québec

Le dentiste au Québec — peu couvert par la RAMQ, prévoyez un budget.

1. What RAMQ covers (very little)

RAMQ covers little:

  • Children under 10 — exam, X-rays, cleaning, fillings, simple extractions
  • Last-resort social assistance recipients — expanded access
  • Adults in general — only hospital-based emergencies
  • Everything else — at your expense or via private insurance

2. The Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP)

Since 2024, the CDCP covers households with:

  • Family net income < 90,000 $ per year
  • No access to private dental insurance (including employer, union, student)
  • Reimbursed share: 100 % under 70,000 $, 60 % between 70 and 80,000 $, 40 % between 80 and 90,000 $
  • Enrolment via the Government of Canada website

3. Typical costs without insurance

Typical costs without insurance:

  • Exam + cleaning — 150 $ to 250 $
  • Filling — 200 $ to 400 $
  • Root canal — 800 $ to 1,500 $
  • Crown — 1,000 $ to 1,800 $
  • Simple extraction — 150 $ to 300 $

4. Compare your coverage options

Here are the main dental coverage options, with their scope, reimbursed share and target audience.

OptionTarget audiencePreventiveMajorAnnual cap
RAMQChildren < 10✅ Covered✅ Basic fillingsNone
RAMQ — adultsHospital emergenciesn/a
Federal CDCPIncome < 90,000 $, no private40-100 % by income40-100 % by incomeNo strict cap
Group insuranceEmployees (employer)~80 %~50 %1,500-2,000 $
Individual private insuranceSelf-employedVariableVariableVariable
No coverage at allAdults not eligible0 %0 %You pay everything

Group insurance offered by employers is almost always the best option. The premium is shared between you and the employer, and coverage often starts from the first month of employment. Ask your HR department for a copy of the insurance certificate at hiring.

5. Private dental insurance

Typical group insurance covers:

  • 80 % of preventive care (exam, cleaning, fillings)
  • 50 % of major care (crowns, bridges, dentures)
  • Annual maximum: 1,500 $ to 2,000 $
  • Adult orthodontics: often excluded
  • Child orthodontics: sometimes 50 % up to 1,500-2,500 $ lifetime

6. Finding a dentist

To find a dentist:

  • Recommendations from colleagues, friends or neighbours
  • Ordre des dentistes du Québec — official online directory
  • Geographic proximity — convenient for recurring appointments
  • University clinics — Université de Montréal and Université Laval, reduced prices, supervised students

7. Recommended frequency

Recommended frequency:

  • Exam + cleaning: every 6 to 12 months
  • Routine X-rays: every 2 to 3 years (healthy adults)
  • Children: annual follow-up

8. Frequently asked questions

The most-asked questions from newcomers about Quebec dentists: how the CDCP works, what to do in a dental emergency, whether dentists speak English, and what a first visit costs.

Am I eligible for the Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP)?

Three conditions:

  • Family net income < 90,000 $
  • No access to private dental insurance (employer, union, student)
  • Canadian tax resident with previous-year tax return filed

The reimbursed share: 100 % under 70,000 $, 60 % between 70 and 80,000 $, 40 % between 80 and 90,000 $. Sign up at canada.ca/dental. Having access to employer insurance without using it = not eligible.

What to do in a dental emergency?

Three options:

  1. Call your usual dentist — emergency slots often available
  2. Info-Santé at 811 for a triage by a nurse
  3. Hospital ER for fracture or infection with fever — RAMQ covers these cases

Avoid the regular ER for a simple toothache — you'll wait hours without definitive care.

Do Quebec dentists speak English?

In Montreal, the West Island, the Laurentians and the downtown clinics, most dentists are bilingual.

In Quebec City and the regions, French is the working language and not all are comfortable in English. Ask when booking. Westmount, NDG, Pointe-Claire explicitly advertise English-language service.

How much does a first dentist visit cost?

A first complete visit — exam, 4 to 18 X-rays, full cleaning — costs 200 to 400 $ without insurance.

With group insurance covering 80 % of preventive care, your share drops to 40 to 80 $. Ask for a pre-determination from your insurer — answer in 1-2 weeks.

9. Official sources

For official information:

Phone: Info-Santé at 811 for emergency guidance.

10. See also

Related guides that may be useful:


Author's Note: Never skip the yearly cleaning. A cavity treated early = 300 $; ignored = 1,500 $ root canal. Prevention is by far the best dental investment in Quebec. If your family income is < 90,000 $ without private insurance, take 30 minutes to check your eligibility for the CDCP — it reimburses up to 100 % of basic care.

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