Free & low-cost pediatric dentists in Massachusetts
Massachusetts has 300 active federally-funded community health centers across 75 cities and towns offering pediatric and family dental care to Medicaid, CHIP, and uninsured children. The state's Medicaid dental program is administered by MassHealth.
Medicaid & CHIP dental coverage for kids in Massachusetts
If your child is enrolled in MassHealth or MassHealth/CMSP, pediatric dental care is a covered benefit at no cost to your family. MassHealth Dental: comprehensive pediatric coverage including orthodontia for severe cases. Federal EPSDT rules guarantee these benefits in every state, but the program brand name, managed-care administrator, and exact list of covered procedures vary, so the summary below is specific to Massachusetts.
Who qualifies in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts covers children under 19 in families earning up to 305% of the federal poverty level through MassHealth/CMSP. That works out to the following gross household income limits for 2026:
| Family size | Annual income limit | Monthly income limit |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $45,933 | $3,828 |
| 2 | $62,342 | $5,195 |
| 3 | $78,751 | $6,563 |
| 4 | $95,160 | $7,930 |
| 5 | $111,569 | $9,297 |
| 6 | $127,978 | $10,665 |
Income limits are based on the 2024 federal poverty guidelines (the most recent published) and the state's 305% threshold. If your income is over the limit, you may still qualify for Massachusetts's sliding-fee scale at any community health center listed below.
What's covered for kids?
- Routine exams and cleanings every six months from age 1 onward.
- Fluoride varnish and protective dental sealants on permanent molars.
- Cavity fillings, including tooth-colored composite when clinically appropriate.
- Stainless-steel crowns and pulpotomies (baby root canals) for severely decayed teeth.
- Tooth extractions and emergency pain treatment.
- Orthodontia when medically necessary (cleft lip/palate, severe malocclusion).
What if we don't have insurance?
Every clinic in this directory is a federally-funded community health center. By law, these clinics must serve every patient regardless of insurance and must charge on a sliding fee scale tied to your household income. Bring a recent pay stub or tax return, and the clinic's enrollment counselor will calculate what you owe. Many families pay $25–$45 for a complete pediatric dental visit.
In-depth Massachusetts dental guides
Long-form, parent-friendly guides written specifically for Massachusetts families. Each one combines real MassHealth rules with practical advice from community dentists.
Medicaid dental coverage for kids in Massachusetts
Read the Massachusetts guide →
Children's dentistry essentials in Massachusetts
Read the Massachusetts guide →
Emergency dental care in Massachusetts — what to do when a tooth can't wait
Read the Massachusetts guide →
Sliding-fee dental pricing in Massachusetts — how community health centers calculate what you pay
Read the Massachusetts guide →
Browse Massachusetts by city
Below are the cities in Massachusetts with the most community health center sites. If your city isn't listed, scroll to the full alphabetical list at the bottom of this page or call the nearest clinic and ask about transportation assistance — most CHCs have established patient-transport programs.
Boston
33 clinics
Lynn
33 clinics
Worcester
18 clinics
Dorchester
18 clinics
Lawrence
15 clinics
Springfield
11 clinics
Salem
10 clinics
Roxbury
8 clinics
Brockton
8 clinics
Lowell
7 clinics
Mattapan
6 clinics
Cambridge
5 clinics
Quincy
5 clinics
Haverhill
4 clinics
Roxbury Crossing
4 clinics
Holyoke
4 clinics
Fall River
4 clinics
New Bedford
4 clinics
Methuen
4 clinics
Greenfield
4 clinics
Peabody
4 clinics
Falmouth
4 clinics
East Boston
4 clinics
Taunton
3 clinics
All cities in Massachusetts
Every city in Massachusetts with at least one HRSA-funded community health center.