I spoke with the dentist I wanted to go to and explained my financial situation and lack of dental insurance. I told them I could pay $50.00 a month. I paid that way until I had half of the bill paid for what I needed done and then they did the work. I still pay $50.00 a month because I have the other half to pay off. So you might want to try asking them for a similar arrangement.
2006-10-16 09:30:12
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I agree with those that talked about Care Credit. We use that in my office. However, the interest situation varies from office to office. We used to pay the interest for anyone who financed for 18 months and under, however we started only paying the interest for those that finance under 12 months, because there were so many people picking the 18 months no interest plan, that the interest was killing us.
I once worked in an office that would take 2 payments for things like rootcanals done in 2 visits, crowns, and dentures. But there were so many patients who started the work and then never came back, that we stopped that.
2006-10-17 08:06:18
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answer #2
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answered by LittleMermaid 5
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There is a company called care credit. I am not sure how to reach them direct, but while you are searching for a Dr. ask if they use this co.
The beauty about this co. is that you don't have to pay the interest the Dr. does. We use it in the office that I work at.
2006-10-16 21:27:29
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answer #3
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answered by Ron's wife 3
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Look in the yellow pages for dentists who advertise "financing available"
Many dentists participate in financing with CareCredit and other similar companies.
http://carecredit.com/providerloc/ -- this will help you locate a dentist that does financing thru CareCredit
2006-10-16 17:25:43
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answer #4
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answered by _LitMatch_ 3
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Access Dental is very good at low cost payments. They work with low income patients.
2006-10-16 16:41:17
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answer #5
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answered by ? 2
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