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She’s an adult. She will need to deal with it. She’s working full time. Doesn’t she have insurance available through her employer?
A college student may be able to get some insurance through the university.
There are exceptions if your child is disabled.
My older son stopped receiving medical and dental at 26, but thankfully, he was able to get full coverage through his employer at 25 and hadn't needed ours. My younger son, level 3 autism, is on medicaid as secondary, but has full coverage for life (my husbands,mind you) as his primary due to being permanently disabled.
Is she still at home? Mine is 21 and we are telling her to start looking for coverage as she is graduating early in December for her bachelors. She doesn’t live at home, but still has coverage… for now.
Yes she does and we are looking into coverage. At least the medical continues. Just a cost cutting measure I guess
She is an adult; and should be able to get insurance. My issue was only that she had to find out the hard way, and the dentist when she had already been dropped.It kinda sucked
Dental insurance is notoriously bad. I regularly discuss this with the women at the desk at my dentist's office as I'm paying my astronomical bills even though I have insurance. If your daughter is working full time, she should be able to get insurance: health, dental, vision.