How Much Is
Invisalign With Insurance?
Most PPO plans cover $1,000–$3,000 toward Invisalign. Here's exactly what you'll pay at every coverage level — plus how lifetime maximums work, which insurers cover it, and every way to reduce your cost.
In This Guide
- The Short Answer
- How Dental Insurance Covers Invisalign
- Coverage by Major Insurer
- Lifetime Orthodontic Maximums Explained
- Real Out-of-Pocket Scenarios
- Teen Invisalign With Insurance
- No Insurance? Your Options
- How to Maximize Your Coverage
- Financing & Monthly Payment Estimates
- Questions to Ask Your Insurer Before Starting
- Frequently Asked Questions
The Short Answer
With PPO dental insurance, most patients pay $1,500–$3,500 out of pocket for Invisalign after coverage. Most PPO plans that include orthodontic benefits pay a lifetime maximum of $1,000–$3,000 toward Invisalign — applied the same way as traditional braces. The national average Invisalign cost before insurance is approximately $3,000–$8,000, with comprehensive adult cases averaging $5,000–$6,000. Your out-of-pocket equals your provider's total fee minus your plan's lifetime orthodontic maximum.
The frustrating reality is that most orthodontic practices won't publish their Invisalign price without a consultation — making it impossible to calculate your out-of-pocket in advance. This guide gives you all the numbers you need: how coverage works, what each major insurer typically pays, and exactly what you'll owe at every coverage level — regardless of which provider you choose.
How Dental Insurance Covers Invisalign
Invisalign coverage is simpler than most people expect once you understand one key distinction: Invisalign is covered under your orthodontic benefit, which operates completely separately from your regular dental benefit and follows different rules.
Orthodontic benefit vs. regular dental benefit
Your regular dental benefit covers cleanings, fillings, crowns, and extractions — it renews every January with a new annual maximum (typically $1,000–$2,000). Your orthodontic benefit is different: it's a one-time lifetime maximum that doesn't reset each year. It covers orthodontic treatment — braces, Invisalign, and related appliances. These are two separate pools of money that don't affect each other.
How the math works
Insurance pays either a percentage of your treatment fee (commonly 50%) up to a lifetime maximum, or simply a flat lifetime benefit amount — whichever is lower. For example: if your plan covers 50% of orthodontic fees up to a $2,000 lifetime maximum and Invisalign costs $5,000 total, insurance pays $2,000 (50% of $5,000 = $2,500, but capped at $2,000 maximum). You pay the remaining $3,000.
Key things your plan documents should tell you
- Whether your plan includes orthodontic benefits at all — not all plans do
- Your lifetime orthodontic maximum — the total your insurer will ever pay
- The coverage percentage — typically 50% of covered charges, subject to the lifetime max
- Whether Invisalign / clear aligners are specifically covered or excluded
- Age restrictions — some plans cover orthodontics only for dependents under 18 or 19
- Waiting periods — some plans require 12–24 months of enrollment before ortho benefits activate
- Whether pre-authorization is required before treatment begins
Is the Invisalign coverage the same as braces?
For most PPO plans, yes. Insurers generally treat Invisalign identically to traditional braces under the orthodontic benefit — both are orthodontic treatment. Some older or more restrictive plans have explicit exclusions for "clear aligners" or "Invisalign." Check your plan's exclusions section for these specific words. If no exclusion exists, Invisalign should be covered at the same rate as braces.
Coverage by Major Insurer
Coverage varies enormously by specific plan, not just by insurer. The same insurance company can offer $1,000 orthodontic coverage on a basic plan and $3,000 on a premium employer plan. The figures below are typical ranges — your plan documents always take precedence.
| Insurer | Covers Invisalign? | Typical Coverage | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delta Dental | Yes — most plans | $1,000–$2,000 lifetime | Covered as standard ortho benefit on all plans that include orthodontics. Delta states Invisalign is covered wherever braces are covered. Amount varies significantly by plan tier. |
| Cigna | Yes — most plans | $1,000 lifetime (Dental 1500) | Dental 1500 plan has a $1,000 orthodontic max. Higher-tier employer plans may offer more. Covered same as braces on plans with orthodontic benefits. |
| Aetna | Yes — most plans | $1,000–$2,000 typical | Covered under orthodontic benefit. Some plans have adult ortho exclusions — confirm whether your plan covers adults specifically before starting. |
| MetLife | Yes — with pre-estimate | 50% of covered fees up to plan max | Requires pre-treatment estimate submission. Coverage applies as long as provider is a licensed Invisalign provider. Always request a pre-estimate before starting. |
| Guardian | Yes — most plans | $1,000–$2,500 typical | Treats Invisalign same as braces. Employer group plans often have higher maximums than individual plans. |
| United Concordia | Yes — most plans | $1,500–$2,000 typical | Common for military families and employer groups. Orthodontic benefits generally solid on group plans. |
| Ameritas | Yes — most plans | $1,000–$2,000 typical | Known for orthodontic-inclusive plans. Individual market plans often specifically advertise orthodontic coverage. |
| UnitedHealthcare | Yes — most group plans | Varies widely by employer plan | Individual plans may not include orthodontics. Most employer-sponsored UHC group plans cover orthodontics for dependents. Adult coverage varies by plan. |
| Spirit Dental | Yes — most plans | Up to $3,000 on premium plans | Specifically designed for adults seeking ortho coverage. Higher-tier plans offer up to $3,000 lifetime. Worth considering if selecting a new plan specifically for Invisalign. |
| Humana | Partial — varies | Discounts on some; coverage on others | Some individual plans offer orthodontic discounts rather than direct coverage. Employer plans may have full benefits. Confirm whether Invisalign is a covered benefit vs. a discounted service. |
| HMO / DMO Plans | Rarely covered | Usually excluded | HMO and DMO plans rarely cover Invisalign. In-network provider requirements are very restrictive and most Invisalign providers are not in HMO networks. |
Lifetime Orthodontic Maximums Explained
The lifetime orthodontic maximum is the most important number to understand before starting Invisalign — and the one most people overlook until it's too late.
What it is
Your lifetime orthodontic maximum is the total amount your insurance will ever pay toward orthodontic treatment — for your entire life on that plan. Unlike your annual dental maximum, it does not reset each year. Once used, it's gone. If your plan has a $2,000 lifetime orthodontic maximum and insurance pays $2,000 toward your Invisalign, your insurer pays $2,000 total — whether treatment takes one year or three.
Why this catches people off guard
The most common surprise: patients who had braces as children discover their lifetime orthodontic benefit was already spent — sometimes decades earlier, on a plan they were on as a dependent. The benefit tracks total usage, not time. If your parents used your orthodontic benefit at 14, you may have $0 remaining at 35 — even after multiple employer and plan changes.
Common lifetime maximum amounts by plan type
| Plan Type | Typical Lifetime Ortho Max | What You'd Pay on a $5,500 Invisalign Case |
|---|---|---|
| Basic individual plan | $1,000 | ~$4,500 out of pocket |
| Mid-tier individual plan | $1,500 | ~$4,000 out of pocket |
| Standard employer group plan | $2,000 | ~$3,500 out of pocket |
| Premium employer group plan | $2,500–$3,000 | ~$2,500–$3,000 out of pocket |
| Ortho-focused plan (Spirit, etc.) | Up to $3,000 | ~$2,500 out of pocket |
| No orthodontic benefit | $0 | ~$5,500 out of pocket |
Real Out-of-Pocket Scenarios
These scenarios use a $5,500 baseline — close to the national average for comprehensive adult Invisalign before insurance. Your provider's actual fee shifts these numbers, but the structure is identical: out-of-pocket = total provider fee minus your insurance coverage.
No Ortho Coverage
$1,000 Lifetime Max
$1,500 Lifetime Max
$2,000 Lifetime Max
$2,500 Lifetime Max
$3,000 Lifetime Max
*Based on ~$5,500 national average provider total. Your provider's actual fee will shift these amounts. Financing estimates assume 0% interest over 24 months on approved credit.
Teen Invisalign With Insurance
Teen Invisalign applies the same insurance rules as adult Invisalign — it falls under the orthodontic benefit and counts against the lifetime maximum. However, there are a few teen-specific nuances worth knowing before you start.
Age-based coverage differences
Many employer-sponsored PPO plans have higher orthodontic maximums for dependents than for adult members. It's common to see plans covering $2,000 for dependents under 18 and $1,000 for adults — or plans that cover dependents fully but exclude adult orthodontics entirely. Check your plan documents for dependent versus member orthodontic benefit amounts separately.
Per-dependent vs. family aggregate maximum
If multiple children may need orthodontic treatment, this distinction is critical. A per-dependent maximum means each child gets their own $2,000 lifetime benefit. A family aggregate maximum means all children share one pool. Most employer group plans use per-dependent maximums; some individual plans use family aggregate. Confirm with your insurer.
What's included in Teen Invisalign — and why it matters for pricing
Invisalign Teen includes features not in the standard adult product: compliance indicator dots that fade with wear, extra replacement aligners (typically 6 free replacements for lost or damaged trays), and eruption tabs for second molars still coming in. Confirm whether your provider includes these in the base teen price or bills them separately. Some providers charge more for teen treatment; others charge the same flat price as adult Invisalign. This is worth clarifying upfront.
No Insurance? Your Options
No orthodontic coverage doesn't mean paying the full sticker price in cash. Several strategies can meaningfully reduce what you pay.
HSA and FSA funds
Health Savings Accounts (HSA) and Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA) allow you to pay for Invisalign with pre-tax dollars. The effective discount equals your marginal tax rate — typically 22–32% for most adults. On a $5,500 Invisalign case, paying with an HSA saves approximately $1,210–$1,760 in taxes versus paying with after-tax dollars. HSA funds roll over year to year and can be invested; FSA funds must generally be used within the plan year.
Consider purchasing a plan with orthodontic coverage
If you're self-employed or choosing individual coverage and Invisalign is in your near-term plans, compare plans at open enrollment specifically for their orthodontic maximum. Some individual dental plans (Spirit Dental is a commonly cited example) offer lifetime orthodontic maximums of $1,000–$3,000, marketed to adults who need ortho coverage. Factor in the premium difference and any waiting period — most plans require 12–24 months of enrollment before orthodontic benefits activate.
0% financing
CareCredit and Cherry both offer promotional 0% financing. This doesn't reduce the total cost, but it converts a lump sum into manageable monthly payments — $229/month over 24 months at 0% on a $5,500 balance. See the financing section below for important details about how these products differ.
Compare provider fees directly
Invisalign provider fees vary by thousands of dollars for equivalent treatment. A practice charging $4,500 and one charging $7,500 are using the same aligner trays from Align Technology — the underlying product is identical. The entire difference is overhead and margin. If you're paying out of pocket, the provider's base fee is the single most important variable. Ask for the total treatment fee in writing before comparing providers.
How to Maximize Your Coverage
Verify your remaining lifetime benefit before anything else
Call member services and ask specifically for your remaining balance — not just the maximum. If you had braces as a child, your balance may be far lower than the plan maximum. This single call determines your entire out-of-pocket calculation.
Request a pre-authorization before starting treatment
Ask your Invisalign provider to submit a pre-treatment estimate to your insurer before starting. The insurer responds with the exact dollar amount they'll cover — a committed number, not an estimate. This is the only way to know your precise out-of-pocket before you're financially committed.
Stack insurance with HSA or FSA
Insurance covers part of the fee; HSA/FSA dollars cover your out-of-pocket remainder with pre-tax money. Layering these two reduces total real-dollar cost more than either strategy alone.
Check whether dual coverage applies
If you and a spouse both have dental insurance, you may be able to coordinate both plans — the primary plan pays first, the secondary covers part of the remainder. Coordination of benefits rules are complex; ask both insurers and your provider's billing team how to structure claims correctly.
Start early in the calendar year if benefits pay in installments
Some insurers pay orthodontic benefits in annual installments during treatment rather than all at once. Starting in January maximizes the installments paid within your current plan year.
Compare provider base fees — coverage is only half the equation
The same $2,000 insurance benefit applied to a $4,500 fee leaves $2,500 out of pocket. Applied to a $7,500 fee, it leaves $5,500. The coverage is identical. The $3,000 difference is entirely the provider's base fee. Ask for the total treatment fee upfront at every consultation you attend.
Financing & Monthly Payment Estimates
Most Invisalign providers offer financing through CareCredit, Cherry, or in-house installment plans. You finance your out-of-pocket balance after insurance — not the total treatment fee. If insurance covers $2,000 of a $5,500 fee, you're financing $3,500.
Monthly Payments on Out-of-Pocket Balance at 0% · 24 Months
Questions to Ask Your Insurer Before Starting
These are the exact questions to ask when you call your insurance company — before booking a consultation, before committing to a provider. Write down the representative's name and the date of the call.
- "Does my plan include orthodontic benefits?" — If no, stop here and explore HSA/FSA or plan switching instead.
- "What is my lifetime orthodontic maximum?" — Get the total dollar amount, not a percentage.
- "How much of my lifetime orthodontic benefit has already been used?" — The remaining balance is what matters, not the stated maximum.
- "Is Invisalign / clear aligner treatment covered under my orthodontic benefit?" — Confirm clear aligners are not explicitly excluded.
- "Does my orthodontic benefit cover adults, or only dependents under 18?" — Critical if you are 19 or older.
- "Is there a waiting period before my orthodontic benefit becomes active?" — Some plans require 12–24 months of enrollment first.
- "Is pre-authorization required before orthodontic treatment begins?" — Treatment started without required pre-authorization may not be covered.
- "Are orthodontic benefits paid as a lump sum or in installments over treatment?" — Affects how you plan cash flow during treatment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Invisalign at Best Dental — $4,500 Flat, All-Inclusive
If you're in the Richmond, TX area — or making the drive from Katy, Rosenberg, or Sugar Land — Best Dental offers a concrete example of what transparent Invisalign pricing looks like: $4,500 flat, all-inclusive, published before you call. That's below the national average before insurance applies. With $2,000 insurance coverage, your out-of-pocket is $2,500 — approximately $104/month at 0% over 24 months.
Dr. Naderi is a Platinum Invisalign Provider — top 1% nationally by case volume. Most PPO insurance accepted and verified before treatment begins. No consultation required to find out the price — it's published.


