National medical credentialing & payer enrollment
ProCred

Dental Provider Credentialing

Your license is current, the operatories are ready, the schedule is filling. Then the first claims come back unpaid, because the practice is not in network with the plans your patients carry yet. That gap, between being licensed and actually getting paid, is the whole point of dental credentialing services. We get dentists and dental groups verified and paneled with the plans you want, so claims process instead of piling up as denials. It is the same discipline behind the medical credentialing services we run for every provider type, pointed at the dental world.

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hero — a dentist or practice manager reviewing credentialing and enrollment paperwork at the front desk

Why dental credentialing is its own job

Here is what trips a lot of practices up. Dental payers do not credential the way medical payers do, and they mostly do not share one another's work. Delta Dental has moved toward accepting CAQH data, so a dentist can credential and recredential through CAQH. But not every plan pulls from it. Most dental networks still run their own credentialing and contracting, on their own cycle, with their own forms.

So getting in network with five dental plans is not one application five times. It is five separate processes, each with its own portal, requests and clock. Miss a request from one and that plan stalls while the others move. We track each so nothing waits on a step nobody started.

What we verify for a dentist

Credentialing rests on primary source verification: we confirm each credential directly with the body that issued it, not from a copy you email us. For a dentist that file usually includes:

Your dental degree, DDS or DMD, verified with the school
An active state dental license for every state you practice in
Your NPI Type 1, the individual provider number from NPPES
Your DEA registration, where your scope of practice requires one
Work history and any practice locations
Malpractice coverage and a clean exclusion check

One note that comes up constantly: a DDS and a DMD are the same degree. Doctor of Dental Surgery and Doctor of Dental Medicine come from the same accredited training under the Commission on Dental Accreditation, and state boards license them identically. Whichever letters follow your name, we credential you the same way.

What we verify
  • Dental degree
  • State license
  • NPI
  • DEA
  • Malpractice

Getting paneled with dental insurance networks

Verifying you is half the work. Getting paid means getting in network with the plans your patients actually use. We handle paneling across the major dental networks, including:

Delta Dental, the largest dental carrier, which credentials and recredentials through CAQH
Cigna Dental, MetLife, Aetna Dental and Guardian on the commercial side
DentaQuest and UnitedHealthcare dental, including UCCI

Each carrier credentials and recredentials on its own cycle, typically every two to three years. Where a payer pulls from CAQH, we build and attest your profile and keep it current so it never lapses. Tell us which plans your patients carry, and we map the paneling path for each.

Dental Medicaid and CHIP

Medicaid and CHIP are a different track again, run state by state. Many states contract their dental benefits to administrators rather than running them in house. DentaQuest, for example, is the largest dental benefits administrator for government programs in the country and supports members across more than 35 states.

The process is not uniform. Some states require a CAQH profile for the application; in others the administrator takes its own form, and enrollment runs through the state's own provider system. We work out which path your state uses before we file, so the application lands right the first time.

DSO and multi location credentialing

Groups and Dental Service Organizations carry a heavier version of this. The volume multiplies and the structure matters.

Multi location TIN and NPI structure

Every dentist needs an NPI Type 1. The business entity needs an NPI Type 2, tied to its tax ID, and a location that operates under its own tax ID typically needs its own Type 2. Get the NPI to TIN link wrong on a claim and it denies, one of the most common and most avoidable denials a group hits. We keep every Type 1, Type 2 and tax ID lined up so claims route to the right payee.

When you add an associate or open a location, credentialing should start the day the deal is signed, not on the open date, because the clock runs in months. We onboard each new dentist into the group's contracts and keep the roster current as people join and leave. The wider engine behind that work sits on our group practice credentialing page.

Multi-location structure
Practice entity
Tax ID · Type 2 NPI
Dentist
Type 1 NPI
Dentist
Type 1 NPI

Want to talk through a multi location rollout? Call us and we will walk your structure with you. phone

Oral surgeons and medical plans

Oral and maxillofacial surgeons live in both worlds. A lot of what they do, surgical extractions, biopsies, trauma and pathology, can be medically necessary and billable to a patient's medical plan, not just dental. That means credentialing on the medical side too.

Dentists who enroll with Medicare for these services self designate a dental specialty, commonly 19 for oral surgery or 85 for maxillofacial surgery, and commercial medical plans run their own credentialing. If you want to bill medical, we credential you with those plans alongside your dental networks so the medical claims have somewhere to land. The broader mechanics live on our provider credentialing page.

Timelines

Timelines depend on the payer, not on how fast you sign. Industry typical ranges run about 90 to 120 days to credential and panel a dentist with a commercial dental plan, and roughly 30 to 90 days for recredentialing an existing provider. A saturated market or a closed panel can stretch it further. So start 90 to 120 days before you open, hire an associate, or buy a practice, and you are in network on day one instead of seeing patients you cannot bill for. Any timeline we commit to, we put in writing. company specific turnaround commitment

What we handle, what you supply

We own the maze. You hand us your documents, your signatures where a form needs them, and the plans you care about. We run primary source verification, register and link your NPIs, build and attest CAQH where the payer uses it, submit every dental and medical application, chase the requests for information that come back mid review, and confirm your effective dates so you know when you can bill.

specific proof points — dental providers credentialed, years in business, success rate

Tell us your providers, your states and the plans you want, and we will map your path and send a quote.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Dental credentialing is the verification of a dentist's qualifications, including the dental degree (DDS or DMD), state dental license, NPI and work history, confirmed through primary source verification, followed by enrollment and contracting with each dental insurance network so the provider is in network and can be paid. Each payer credentials separately and on its own cycle.

Industry typical ranges run about 90 to 120 days to credential and panel a dentist with a commercial dental plan, and roughly 30 to 90 days to recredential an existing provider. A complete, clean application moves faster; a missing document or a closed panel can add months, which is why it helps to start 90 to 120 days before you open or onboard.

It depends on the payer. Delta Dental credentials and recredentials through CAQH, and some state Medicaid dental programs require a CAQH profile too. Many other dental plans run their own process and do not pull from CAQH. We build and maintain your CAQH profile where it is used and file the payer's own forms where it is not.

No. Doctor of Dental Surgery and Doctor of Dental Medicine are the same degree, from the same accredited training under the Commission on Dental Accreditation, and state boards license them identically. Payers credential both the same way.

Each dentist carries an NPI Type 1, the entity carries an NPI Type 2 tied to its tax ID, and a location with its own tax ID typically needs its own Type 2. We keep every provider, entity and tax ID linked correctly, onboard new associates into the group's payer contracts, and manage paneling across all locations so claims route to the right payee.

Often yes. Many oral and maxillofacial procedures can be medically necessary and billable to a patient's medical plan. To do that, the surgeon needs to be credentialed with the medical payers, and with Medicare under a dental specialty such as 19 or 85. We can credential oral surgeons on the medical side alongside their dental networks.

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*ProCred — national medical credentialing and payer enrollment for providers, groups and facilities across the United States.*

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