Most expat health insurance excludes routine dental and vision. Dedicated add-ons cost $30-150/month. For many expats, paying cash is dramatically cheaper than insurance — Mexico, Thailand, Hungary, Portugal all have dental tourism prices 30-80% under US/UK. Here’s the math.
Last verified: May 26, 2026.
Add-on options
Cigna Global dental add-on
Adds $30-90/month to base Cigna Global policy. Covers: routine cleanings (1-2/yr), fillings, basic restorative. Major work (crowns, implants, bridges) typically requires 12-month waiting period + 50-80% co-pay.
Allianz Care Dental + Vision
Similar to Cigna. $25-80/month add-on. Stronger network in Europe + UAE; weaker in US + Latin America.
Standalone dental policies
Some carriers offer dental-only international policies. Generally not great value — designed for short-stay travelers.
Country-by-country dental pricing (cash)
Mexico
- Cleaning: $30-50
- Filling: $50-90
- Crown (porcelain): $300-500
- Implant: $700-1,200 (vs $3,000-5,000 in US)
- Root canal: $250-450 (vs $1,000-1,800 in US)
- Hotspot: Los Algodones (border town with US patients flooding in), CDMX, Cancún
Thailand
- Cleaning: $25-45
- Filling: $40-80
- Crown: $250-450 (Bangkok Dental Hospital, Bumrungrad)
- Implant: $1,000-1,600 incl. abutment + crown
- Hotspot: Bangkok (BIDC), Chiang Mai
Hungary
- Cleaning: €40-60
- Filling: €50-100
- Crown: €300-500
- Implant: €700-1,100
- Hotspot: Budapest is dental-tourism capital of Europe
Portugal
- Cleaning: €40-70
- Filling: €60-120
- Crown: €350-600
- Implant: €900-1,500
Spain
- Cleaning: €50-80
- Filling: €70-140
- Crown: €450-700
- Implant: €1,000-1,700
United Kingdom (private, post-NHS)
- Cleaning: £80-150
- Filling: £150-280
- Crown: £600-1,200
- Implant: £2,000-3,500
United States (out-of-pocket)
- Cleaning: $150-300
- Filling: $200-500
- Crown: $1,000-2,000
- Implant: $3,000-5,500
When dental insurance is worth it
- Family with kids: kids need cleanings 2x/year + orthodontics; insurance can pay back fast
- Major work imminent: if you know you’ll need a crown/implant in next 2 years and policy has reasonable waiting periods
- You live in expensive dental countries (UK, Switzerland, Scandinavia): insurance pays back fastest here
- You travel home for dental: some US-based expats fly home for dental work where insurance can pay there
When dental insurance is NOT worth it
- You live in Mexico, Thailand, Hungary, Portugal: cash dental is cheaper than premiums
- You have no major work expected: $80/month × 12 = $960/year, vs ~$200 cash for 2 cleanings + 1 small filling
- You’re already paying Cigna Global Gold/Platinum: the dental add-on adds expense; better to pay cash + accept that major work in dental-tourism countries is affordable
Vision insurance
Mostly not worth it for expats. Average vision insurance costs $15-30/month. Most policies cover only $100-200/year toward glasses/contacts + 1 exam.
Cash vision pricing internationally:
- Vietnam: Eye exam $10-15. Frames + lenses $40-100. Contacts $25-40/pair.
- Thailand: Eye exam $15-25. Glasses $80-200.
- Mexico: Eye exam $20-40. Glasses $80-250.
- UK: NHS free if 60+; otherwise £20-50 exam. Glasses £30-300.
- US: $80-200 exam. $200-800 glasses.
FAQ
Does Genki or SafetyWing cover dental?
SafetyWing Nomad Insurance covers emergency dental only (acute pain or injury). No routine cleanings/fillings. Genki Native + Traveler similar. Both are emergency-only for dental.
Is dental tourism risky?
Top-tier facilities (Bumrungrad Bangkok, BIDC Bangkok, Hungarian dental clinics, BS Clinics Algodones) have international accreditations + warranties. Lower-tier may not. Research clinic reviews, ask for credentials, check warranty terms before procedures.
Dental tourism — real procedure costs verified 2026
Implant + crown packages
- Los Algodones (Mexico, US border): Single implant + crown $850-$1,250 total. Full mouth restoration (8-12 implants) $12K-$22K.
- Cancún: Single $1,100-$1,500. Many premium clinics specifically serving US/Canada patients.
- Bangkok (BIDC, Bumrungrad Dental): Single $1,000-$1,800. Premium accreditation (Joint Commission International). Many US-trained dentists.
- Budapest: Single €650-€1,000. Hungary leads Europe in dental tourism; clinics catering to UK, German, Scandinavian patients.
- Costa Rica (San José): Single $1,300-$1,700. US-style infrastructure, English-only clinics common.
Full mouth rehabilitation costs
- US: $50,000-$90,000
- UK private: £35,000-£60,000
- Mexico (Los Algodones): $15,000-$25,000
- Thailand: $18,000-$28,000
- Hungary: €18,000-€28,000
- Costa Rica: $22,000-$32,000
Vision tourism — even cheaper than dental tourism
- LASIK (Mexico/Thailand): $1,200-$1,800 per eye vs $2,500-$3,500 US
- Cataract surgery (Thailand): $2,500-$4,500 per eye vs $3,500-$7,000 US
- Designer frames (Thailand/Vietnam): $50-$150 vs $300-$800 US
- Prescription glasses (Vietnam): $40-$100 complete with exam vs $300-$600 US
- Contact lenses (Vietnam/Thailand): $25-$50/box vs $80-$150 US
Picking a dental tourism clinic — what to verify
Not all clinics are equal. Before booking major work abroad:
- International accreditation: Joint Commission International (JCI), DNV Healthcare, Accreditation Canada International. JCI is gold standard.
- Dentist credentials: Verify name + license at country dental association. US-trained or US-board-certified dentists charge premium but offer familiar standards.
- Warranty: 5-10 year warranty on implants, 2-5 year on crowns. Get in writing.
- Reviews: Specific to your procedure (single implant vs full mouth). Reddit r/dentaltourism + Trustpilot most reliable.
- Photos of previous work: Request anonymized before/after on similar cases.
- Hospital affiliation: For complex cases, hospital-affiliated clinics handle complications better than standalone offices.
Insurance vs pay-cash — the actual decision framework
Dental + vision insurance is worth it ONLY in specific scenarios. The math:
When insurance pays back
- Family with 2+ kids: kids need cleanings 2x/year + frequent fluoride + likely braces ($3K-$7K). $80/mo dental insurance ($960/year) can save $1,500-$3,000 over a year for active families.
- Major work already planned: if you know you need a crown ($800-$1,500 cash) + cleaning + filling, $80/mo policy beats cash math.
- You live in expensive dental country (UK, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden): insurance pays back fastest where cash dental is most expensive.
- You’ll fly home for dental: if you maintain US dental insurance + fly back annually for cleanings + work — math depends on flight cost, but can work.
When pay-cash wins
- You live in Mexico, Thailand, Hungary, Portugal, Spain (interior): cash dental at quality clinics costs less than premium. Skip the insurance.
- You’re single + healthy + no major work expected: $80/mo × 12 = $960. Cash cost of 2 cleanings + occasional small filling = $200-$400. Insurance loses.
- You already have Cigna Global Gold/Platinum: dental add-on (~$30-$80/mo) often duplicates services you can pay-cash for less in your country.
- Budget-constrained moves: the $80/mo could fund actual dental work in expensive year, vs sitting in insurance premiums.
Top dental + vision tourism destinations — 2026 reality
Mexico — Los Algodones, Cancún, Tijuana
Los Algodones (Algodones) is the world’s densest dental clinic concentration — ~350 dentists in a town of 4,000 people, all specifically serving US/Canadian patients crossing border from Yuma, AZ. Most clinics have US-trained dentists, English-only patient communications, JCI-style accreditation, and warranty programs. Best for: US/Canadian residents who can drive to border. Caveat: not a destination — fly to Yuma + cross border, get work done, return.
Thailand — Bangkok, Phuket
Bangkok International Dental Center (BIDC), Bumrungrad Dental, and Bangkok Hospital Dental Center all hold international accreditations. Many dentists trained at US/UK/Australian universities. Pricing: $1,000-$1,800 for single implant + crown (vs $4,000-$6,000 US). Best combined with vacation; Bangkok + Phuket are tourist hubs with quality post-care.
Hungary — Budapest
Hungary leads Europe in dental tourism volume — 100,000+ international dental patients annually. Budapest dental clinics specifically cater to UK, German, Scandinavian, Irish patients. Specializations: complex implant cases (full mouth restoration), cosmetic dentistry. Pricing: €700-€1,100 implant + crown (vs £2,500+ UK private). Pair with European city break.
Costa Rica — San José
Latin America premium dental destination. US-style infrastructure (US-trained dentists, English-only patient experience). Pricing 30-50% under US ($1,300-$1,700 implant). Best for: US patients wanting Latin American climate + cultural element vs Mexico border-town transactional.
How to pick a dental tourism clinic — vetting checklist
- International accreditation: JCI (Joint Commission International) is gold standard. Also recognized: Accreditation Canada International, DNV Healthcare.
- Dentist credentials: Verify with country’s dental association. US-trained or US-board-certified dentists charge premium but offer familiar standards.
- Warranty: 5-10 year warranty on implants is industry standard. Get it in writing. Verify what triggers warranty (replacement vs repair vs no coverage).
- Reviews: Reddit r/dentaltourism, Trustpilot, dentist-specific Google reviews. Read 1-2 star reviews carefully — they reveal failure modes.
- Photos of similar work: Request anonymized before/after on cases similar to yours. Don’t accept “trust us” — visual proof matters.
- Hospital affiliation: For complex multi-implant cases or anything requiring sedation, hospital-affiliated clinics handle complications better than standalone offices.
- Patient coordinator: Top clinics have dedicated patient coordinators who handle scheduling, accommodation, transport. This signals professional operation.
Additional FAQ
Is dental tourism quality risky?
At top-tier accredited clinics: quality is comparable to US/UK private dental. At budget clinics without accreditation: risk increases significantly. The 30-50% price differential vs US reflects local labor + real estate + regulatory costs, not necessarily quality compromise. Research clinics carefully.
Can my US dental insurance reimburse foreign dental work?
Most US dental insurance is in-network US-only. A few PPO plans (Delta Dental PPO, Cigna Dental Total) provide limited out-of-network reimbursement, including foreign — but typically 30-50% of usual + customary rates. Check your specific plan + claim form. Many tourists pay cash + don’t bother with insurance claim.
Related: Cigna Global review · Genki vs SafetyWing.
✓ Last verified: May 26, 2026.