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Home / Sleep apnea / Medicare & insurance

The question everyone asks first

Does Medicare cover a sleep apnea oral appliance? Yes — here's how.

This surprises almost everyone: a custom sleep apnea appliance from a dentist is usually billed through your medical insurance — not your dental plan — and Medicare Part B covers it as durable medical equipment when the coverage criteria are met.

The plain-English version

Insurance treats obstructive sleep apnea as a medical condition (which it is), so the device that treats it is medical equipment — even though a dentist makes and fits it. Under Medicare, a custom mandibular advancement device falls under code E0486 and is covered as durable medical equipment under Part B, the same benefit category as a CPAP machine.

What Medicare requires before it pays

  • A sleep study — often done at home, in your own bed — showing you have obstructive sleep apnea
  • A physician's diagnosis and order. The dentist treats; a physician diagnoses. Any practice that skips this step is skipping your coverage
  • A custom-fabricated appliance from an enrolled provider — the pharmacy boil-and-bite doesn't qualify

When those boxes are checked, Medicare typically pays its share and you owe the Part B coinsurance (generally 20% after your deductible). Medicare Advantage plans must cover at least the same — details vary by plan, so we always verify before anything is made.

Sources: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Local Coverage Determination L33611 (Oral Appliances for Obstructive Sleep Apnea); American Academy of Dental Sleep Medicine, which confirmed oral appliances remain under the DME benefit for 2026. Read the coverage rule at cms.gov.

Not on Medicare? Private medical insurance usually works the same way

Most commercial medical plans (the same card you'd show your family doctor) cover oral appliance therapy for diagnosed obstructive sleep apnea, subject to your plan's deductible and rules. The same two ingredients matter: a sleep study and a physician's diagnosis.

What trips people up is asking their dental insurance about it and hearing "not covered." Right question, wrong card. Bring your medical insurance information to a sleep consultation and the office can help you find out where you stand before you commit to anything.

Worth writing down

Sleep appliance = medical insurance. Night guard for grinding = dental insurance (when covered at all). They look similar; they are entirely different devices, coverage-wise and medically. More on that in the FAQ.

Coverage questions, answered

Is the appliance covered under dental or medical insurance?
Medical. Obstructive sleep apnea is a medical condition, so the appliance that treats it is billed to medical insurance — Medicare included. Your dental plan is the wrong card for this one, even though a dentist provides the device.
What exactly does Medicare require?
Three things: a sleep study confirming obstructive sleep apnea, a physician's diagnosis and order, and a custom-fabricated appliance (HCPCS code E0486) from an enrolled provider. Then Medicare Part B pays its share and you owe the usual coinsurance, generally 20% after the deductible.
I have a Medicare Advantage plan — does this still apply?
Medicare Advantage plans must cover at least what Original Medicare covers, but networks, prior authorizations, and copays vary by plan. Bring your card to a consultation and the office will help verify your specific plan before anything is made.
Will my CPAP history help or hurt my coverage?
It usually helps. Documented CPAP intolerance is often exactly what insurers want to see before covering an oral appliance — especially for more severe apnea. Your struggle with the mask isn't wasted; it's part of your paperwork.