Last updated: May 20, 2026
Bottom line
If you are a single mother in North Dakota and need dental care, start with coverage first. Check whether you or your child can get Medicaid or CHIP through Apply for Help. Then call clinics that offer sliding-fee dental care, such as health centers, community dental clinics, school programs, or tribal/IHS clinics if that applies to your family.
Dental help is not always fast. Some clinics have waitlists, some services need prior approval, and not every dentist takes Medicaid or new patients. But there are real places to try: Medicaid and CHIP, Federally Qualified Health Centers, SEAL!ND school dental prevention, the Ronald McDonald Care Mobile, Donated Dental Services, and local 211 referrals.
This guide is general information only. It is not medical advice. If you have swelling, fever, trouble breathing, trouble swallowing, heavy bleeding, or severe pain, seek urgent medical or dental care right away.
Urgent dental help
Do not wait if you or your child has facial swelling, fever, trouble breathing, trouble swallowing, or a dental injury with heavy bleeding. Call 911 or go to an emergency room. An ER may not fix the tooth, but it can help with infection, pain, or a dangerous health problem.
For same-day dental triage during business hours, call a clinic before you go. Ask if they have urgent dental slots, cancellation openings, or a limited pain visit. In Grand Forks, Spectra dental care lists same-day dental scheduling by phone. In Fargo, Family HealthCare dental accepts many insurance plans and medical assistance programs and has an access plan for people without coverage. In Bismarck, Bridging the Dental Gap serves Medicaid, uninsured, under-insured, and low-income patients.
If you are connected to the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, check Elbowoods dentistry for emergency dental walk-in hours. If you are near Belcourt or Fort Yates, contact Turtle Mountain IHS or Standing Rock IHS to confirm dental services, hours, and eligibility.
Where to start
Use the path that fits your family today. You may need to use more than one path at the same time.
If your child needs care
Check Medicaid or CHIP first. Children on Medicaid or CHIP can get dental care, and the InsureKidsNow dentist finder can help you search for dentists who take Medicaid or CHIP.
If you are pregnant
Tell North Dakota HHS you are pregnant when you apply or renew. Pregnant women may qualify under a different Medicaid group than other adults. Use Medicaid eligibility to check current rules.
If you have no insurance
Search for a clinic through the HRSA health center finder. Health centers may provide medical and dental care on a sliding fee scale based on ability to pay.
If you are overwhelmed
Call FirstLink 211. Ask for dental clinics, transportation help, local charities, Medicaid application help, and emergency referrals near your ZIP code.
Quick reference: best first step by need
| Need | First place to try | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| Child needs a dentist | Medicaid, CHIP, or InsureKidsNow | “Are you taking new Medicaid or CHIP patients?” |
| Adult needs a cleaning or filling | Medicaid if eligible, then sliding-fee clinic | “What is the self-pay or sliding-fee cost?” |
| Severe pain or swelling | Urgent dental clinic or ER if dangerous symptoms | “Do you have a pain visit today?” |
| Child needs sealants | School nurse or SEAL!ND | “Does our school take part in SEAL!ND?” |
| Long-term disability or age-related need | Dental Lifeline Network | “Is my county accepting DDS applications?” |
Medicaid, CHIP, and dental coverage in North Dakota
North Dakota Medicaid can help pay for dental care for children and adults who qualify, but the coverage group matters. The state member handbook says dental coverage may include exams, cleanings, fillings, tooth removals, fluoride varnish, x-rays, crowns or dentures with prior authorization, and root canal treatment on front teeth only for adults. Your dentist still needs to confirm whether a service is covered for you before treatment starts.
Children have stronger dental protections. North Dakota says children on Medicaid can get dental care, vision checks, and wellness visits. The state also says CHIP is for uninsured children who are North Dakota residents, age 18 or younger, and live in families with qualifying incomes. Start at the CHIP page if your child is uninsured but your income may be too high for regular Medicaid.
Parents and caretaker relatives may qualify for a Medicaid group that includes medical, dental, and vision coverage. Medicaid Expansion is different. North Dakota’s eligibility page says Medicaid Expansion helps adults ages 19 through 64 with medical costs but does not provide dental or vision care. If you have serious or complex health needs, ask HHS whether the medically frail process applies to you.
For a broader overview of health coverage, use our Medicaid guide and the North Dakota page for healthcare help before you compare options.
Low-cost dental clinics and programs
If you cannot get dental coverage, or if you need help while you wait, call clinics that offer sliding-fee or reduced-cost care. Sliding fee does not always mean free. It usually means the clinic reviews your household size and income and sets a lower fee if you qualify.
| Program | Area | Good fit for | Reality check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Family HealthCare | Fargo area | Adults and children; Medicaid and access plan options | Call first and ask if new dental patients are being accepted. |
| Spectra Health | Grand Forks area | Preventive, restorative, child screenings, urgent dental triage | Same-day visits are first come, first served and may be limited. |
| Northland Health Centers | Several rural sites | Medical, behavioral, and dental help with income-based support | You must submit proof of income for Northland Cares before discounts are set. |
| Bridging the Dental Gap | Bismarck area | Medicaid, uninsured, under-insured, and low-income patients | Ask for a written estimate before larger dental work. |
| Dental Lifeline Network | Statewide, county status varies | People who are elderly, medically fragile, or have a disability | Some counties may not be accepting applications. |
Dental Lifeline North Dakota can be a good path for people with a permanent disability, older adults, or people who are medically fragile and cannot afford dental care. It is not a fast emergency program. Check the county list before applying.
The North Dakota Mission of Mercy is a free pop-up dental event when it is scheduled and funded. The Mission of Mercy site lists results from the 2024 event and the types of services that may be offered, such as cleanings, fillings, extractions, fluoride, sealants, and x-rays. Treat it as a backup option, not a regular dental home.
Children, schools, and prevention
If your child has Medicaid or CHIP, use the dentist finder and start calling. Ask whether the office takes your child’s exact plan and whether it is taking new patients. If the first dentist says no, ask the office if they know another dentist nearby who is accepting children with Medicaid or CHIP.
North Dakota also has school-based prevention through the SEAL!ND program. Public health dental hygienists visit participating schools and provide oral health education, a dental screening, dental sealants, and fluoride varnish. A parent or guardian must sign a consent form.
In western North Dakota, the Care Mobile provides mobile dental care for underserved children ages 0 through 21 in many communities. Ask your school nurse, Head Start program, tribal office, or local health office whether the Care Mobile visits your area.
For related family support, see North Dakota WIC benefits, SNAP help, child care help, and baby gear help for nearby family needs.
Tribal, rural, and travel options
Dental access can be hard in rural North Dakota. HRSA’s shortage maps show dental Health Professional Shortage Areas using data updated in May 2026. That means some families may need to call several offices, travel farther, or use school-based and mobile programs when available. Use the HRSA shortage maps if you need to understand why local appointments are limited.
If you are eligible for Indian Health Service or tribal health services, call your local facility before going. Ask about dental eligibility, walk-in hours, emergency dental rules, and whether you need to bring tribal enrollment information, ID, insurance cards, or Medicaid details.
For rural help beyond dental care, ASMOM has a North Dakota rural help guide. If a disability affects your ability to make or keep dental appointments, also see disability support for more support paths.
How to apply and book care
- Check coverage first. Apply online through North Dakota Apply for Help, call the Customer Support Center at 866-614-6005, or use Ways to apply for paper forms and application help.
- Use the right office. If you need in-person help, contact your county Human Service Zones office. These offices help with Medicaid, SNAP, TANF, child care assistance, heating assistance, and local referrals.
- Ask about active coverage. Before a dental visit, ask HHS or your plan whether your coverage is active and whether the service needs prior authorization.
- Call the dentist yourself. Say the plan name, the patient’s age, the dental problem, and whether you can travel. Ask for cancellation lists.
- Get costs in writing. If you are uninsured or the service is not covered, ask for the estimate before treatment starts.
If dental bills are part of a bigger emergency, use North Dakota emergency help, utility help, and community support to look for help with other bills while you handle dental care.
Documents and information to gather
Have these items ready before you apply for coverage or ask for a sliding-fee discount.
| Item | Why it matters | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Photo ID | Confirms identity for coverage or clinic forms | Ask the clinic what it accepts if your ID is expired. |
| Proof of income | Used for Medicaid, CHIP, and sliding-fee programs | Bring recent pay stubs, benefit letters, or self-employment records. |
| Household details | Programs use household size for eligibility | Include children in the home and pregnancy when asked. |
| Insurance cards | Helps the clinic confirm coverage before treatment | Bring Medicaid, CHIP, private insurance, or tribal/IHS details. |
| Dental symptoms | Helps the scheduler decide urgency | Write down pain, swelling, fever, broken tooth, or bleeding. |
| Denial or notice | Needed if you must appeal or fix a case issue | Save every letter and screenshot from the portal. |
Common mistakes to avoid
- Assuming every dentist takes Medicaid. Always ask if the office takes North Dakota Medicaid or CHIP and if it is taking new patients.
- Assuming Medicaid Expansion includes dental. North Dakota says adult Medicaid Expansion does not provide dental or vision care. Ask HHS if another coverage group or medically frail review may apply.
- Starting expensive work without approval. Crowns, dentures, partial dentures, and other services may need prior authorization. Ask before treatment starts.
- Missing renewal mail. North Dakota tells members to keep contact information updated through the Self-Service Portal or Customer Support Center. Use Stay Enrolled if you need renewal help.
- Using medical credit too fast. Medical credit cards can carry deferred-interest risks. Read the CFPB warning on medical credit cards before signing.
If you are denied, delayed, or stuck
If Medicaid or CHIP is denied, read the notice carefully. It should say why and what deadlines apply. If the denial seems wrong, ask HHS how to appeal or fix missing documents. You can also ask a navigator or legal aid program for help understanding notices.
If the dentist says no, ask for referrals. Try a different city, a cancellation list, a school-based program, a mobile clinic, or a sliding-fee health center. If your child is in pain, ask the school nurse, Head Start, pediatrician, or local public health office about dental referrals.
For money and paperwork issues, see North Dakota grants for a broader benefits overview and legal help if you need help with a benefits denial, debt, custody-related paperwork, or unsafe housing connected to your family situation.
Phone scripts you can use
Calling Medicaid or CHIP
“Hi, I am a single parent in North Dakota. I need dental care for myself or my child. Can you tell me if our Medicaid or CHIP coverage is active, whether dental is included for our coverage group, and if any services need prior authorization?”
Calling a dental clinic
“Hi, I am looking for a dentist who takes North Dakota Medicaid or offers a sliding fee. Are you accepting new patients? I have pain or need an exam. Do you have urgent openings or a cancellation list?”
Calling a school nurse
“Hi, I need dental help for my child. Does the school take part in SEAL!ND or the Care Mobile? Is there a consent form, clinic date, or referral list for families who cannot afford dental care?”
Calling 211
“Hi, I need low-cost dental care near my ZIP code. Can you search for dental clinics, transportation help, Medicaid application help, school dental programs, and any local charity funds?”
Resumen en español
Si necesita ayuda dental en North Dakota, primero revise Medicaid o CHIP para usted o sus hijos. También puede llamar a clínicas con descuento según ingresos, centros de salud, programas escolares como SEAL!ND, clínicas móviles para niños, o servicios tribales/IHS si aplica.
Si hay hinchazón en la cara, fiebre, dificultad para respirar o tragar, sangrado fuerte o dolor severo, busque atención urgente. Llame al 911 o vaya a una sala de emergencia si los síntomas parecen peligrosos.
Antes de una cita, pregunte si aceptan Medicaid o CHIP, si aceptan nuevos pacientes, cuánto costará la visita, y si el tratamiento necesita aprobación previa.
FAQ
Does North Dakota Medicaid cover dental care?
North Dakota Medicaid can cover dental care for children and adults who qualify, but limits and prior authorization rules may apply. Check the member handbook and ask your dentist to confirm coverage before treatment.
Does Medicaid Expansion cover dental in North Dakota?
North Dakota says Medicaid Expansion helps adults ages 19 through 64 with medical costs but does not provide dental or vision care. Ask HHS if another coverage group or medically frail review may fit your situation.
How do I find a dentist for my child on Medicaid or CHIP?
Use the InsureKidsNow dentist finder, then call each office to ask if they take your child’s plan and are accepting new patients. Also ask about cancellation lists.
Where can uninsured adults get low-cost dental care?
Try HRSA-funded health centers, Family HealthCare, Spectra Health, Northland Health Centers, Bridging the Dental Gap, and Dental Lifeline Network if you meet its rules. Fees and openings vary.
Can my child get dental help at school?
Possibly. SEAL!ND provides dental screenings, sealants, fluoride varnish, and oral health education at participating schools with parent or guardian consent.
What should I do for dental swelling or fever?
Do not wait. Call 911 or go to an emergency room if there is facial swelling, fever, trouble breathing, trouble swallowing, or heavy bleeding. For less dangerous pain, call clinics and ask for urgent dental triage.
About this guide
This guide uses official federal, state, local, and other high-trust nonprofit and community sources mentioned in the article.
A Single Mother is independent and is not a government agency, benefits office, lender, law firm, medical provider, or tax advisor.
Program rules, funding, local availability, and eligibility can change. Always confirm details with the official program before you apply or make decisions.
Verification: Last verified May 20, 2026, next review August 20, 2026.
Corrections: If you see something wrong or outdated, email suggestions@asinglemother.org with the correction.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only. It is not legal, financial, medical, tax, immigration, disability, safety, or government-agency advice.