Regular dental cleanings, exams, and X-rays are good for your smile and they’re one of the most cost-effective ways to protect your overall health and keep out-of-pocket costs low. Here’s what the research shows, and what it means for you.
It’s easy to put off a dental cleaning when you’re feeling fine. But what many people don’t realize is that small, undetected dental problems grow quietly, which can hurt your wallet. A cavity caught at a routine exam costs a fraction of what a root canal costs once that same cavity reaches the nerve. Gum disease identified early can be treated with more frequent cleanings or a deep cleaning, but left untreated, it may require surgical intervention costing thousands of dollars.
The math is clear: Two preventive visits per year are far less expensive than the restorative procedures they help you avoid. For Devoted Health members, whose dental benefits typically cover preventive care at 100%, those twice-yearly cleanings and exams may cost nothing out of pocket, making consistent preventive care one of the smartest financial decisions a member can make.
Many people assume a dental cleaning is just about polishing teeth. In reality, a comprehensive preventive visit includes several layers of care that work together to protect your health.
Even with diligent brushing and flossing at home, plaque hardens into calculus (tartar) in hard-to-reach areas that only a professional hygienist can safely remove. Left in place, this buildup fuels gum inflammation (gingivitis) and, over time, full periodontal disease, which has now been linked to serious health conditions including heart disease and diabetes complications.
Your dental exam is about far more than checking for cavities. During a thorough exam, your dentist evaluates the health of your gums, your bite alignment, existing restorations, soft tissues, and lymph nodes. They’re looking for early warning signs of conditions that, if caught in time, can be treated conservatively, saving you from more complex, expensive procedures down the road.
Dental X-rays allow your dentist to see what’s happening between teeth, below the gumline, and inside bone. Problems like bone loss, abscesses, impacted teeth, and early-stage decay between teeth are invisible to the naked eye. Catching these issues early keeps treatment options simple and affordable.

One of the most underappreciated benefits of regular dental visits is their role in early detection of serious systemic health conditions. The mouth is a window into the body’s overall health, and dentists are often the first clinicians to spot signs of disease that extend well beyond the teeth and gums.
People with uncontrolled or undiagnosed diabetes are significantly more prone to gum disease, persistent infections, and slow healing after dental procedures. Dentists trained to recognize these oral manifestations may prompt a patient to seek medical testing; sometimes leading to a diabetes diagnosis that wasn’t previously on the patient’s radar. Conversely, patients who know they have diabetes can benefit greatly from more frequent preventive dental visits, because well-managed oral health supports better blood sugar control.
Many dental offices take blood pressure readings before procedures. This brief check has led to patients discovering dangerously elevated blood pressure they were unaware of, a condition known as the “silent killer” because it typically has no symptoms. An early referral to a physician can prevent a stroke or heart attack, outcomes that carry immeasurable medical and human costs.
Oral cancer affects tens of thousands of Americans every year, and survival rates are dramatically better when it’s caught early. Dentists perform oral cancer screenings as a standard part of a comprehensive exam and check the lips, tongue, floor of the mouth, cheeks, and throat for suspicious lesions or tissue changes. For patients who use tobacco, drink alcohol regularly, or have had HPV exposure, these screenings are especially critical.
Research has established a significant association between gum disease and cardiovascular disease. The leading theory is that bacteria from inflamed gum tissue enter the bloodstream and contribute to arterial inflammation, a known driver of heart attack and stroke risk. While the science continues to evolve, the connection is strong enough that cardiologists and dentists increasingly view oral health as a component of heart health. Keeping your gums healthy through regular preventive care may be doing more for your heart than you realize.
The link between oral health and total healthcare spending is well-documented. Multiple large-scale studies have found that individuals who receive regular preventive dental care have meaningfully lower overall medical costs, which includes fewer emergency room visits, fewer hospitalizations, and lower spending on treatment of chronic conditions like diabetes and heart disease.
Here’s why this matters for Devoted Health members in particular:
For Devoted Health members, many of whom are managing multiple health conditions while living on fixed incomes, avoiding these downstream costs isn’t just a financial benefit. It’s a quality-of-life issue. Preventive dental care is one of the clearest examples of spending a small amount now to avoid spending a much larger amount later.
Devoted Health includes dental benefits specifically because the evidence supporting their value is so strong. Here’s how to make sure you’re getting the most from your coverage:
Preventive dental care is one of the highest-return investments a person can make in their health. For Devoted Health members, the opportunity is even clearer: your plan is designed to support the care that keeps you healthiest at the lowest possible cost, and that starts with showing up for your cleanings and exams.
Every cleaning is a checkpoint. Every exam is an opportunity to catch something small before it becomes something big. And every X-ray is a look beneath the surface at problems that, if left undetected, could cost you in dollars, in health, and in quality of life.
Don’t let your dental benefits go unused this year. Schedule your next visit, bring your Devoted Health member card, and let your dentist be one of your greatest allies in living a healthier, more affordable life.
Ready to schedule your next cleaning? Contact DenScore or log into your Devoted Health member portal to find the best dentist for your needs.