Guides et questions fréquentes

Des réponses en langage clair à ce que les Canadiens demandent réellement au sujet du RCSD.

Admissibilité

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Who is eligible for the Canadian Dental Care Plan?

You qualify for the CDCP if all four are true: you're a Canadian resident for tax purposes, you filed last year's tax return, your adjusted family net income is under $90,000, and you don't have access to private dental insurance. The plan is now open to eligible residents of every age.

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Admissibilité

Do I qualify for the Canadian Dental Care Plan?

You likely qualify if you're a Canadian tax resident, filed last year's taxes, have adjusted family net income under $90,000, and have no access to private dental insurance. The fastest way to know is to run our free 60-second eligibility check.

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What are the CDCP income limits for 2026?

The CDCP covers people with adjusted family net income under $90,000. Under $70,000, the plan pays 100% of eligible costs; $70,000–$79,999 it pays 60%; $80,000–$89,999 it pays 40%; at $90,000 or more you aren't eligible.

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Admissibilité

Can I get the CDCP if I have dental insurance?

Generally no. If you have access to private dental insurance — through your or a family member's employer, pension, a group/student plan, or a plan you bought — you aren't eligible, even if you decline it. The exception: dental coverage through a government social program does not count, so you may still qualify.

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Admissibilité

Are seniors eligible for the Canadian Dental Care Plan?

Yes. There's no age limit — seniors qualify on the same terms as everyone: Canadian tax residency, a filed tax return, adjusted family net income under $90,000, and no access to private dental insurance. Coverage includes the services many seniors need, like dentures and exams.

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