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Beneficial Dental Legislation In Effect As of July 1

The 2026 Indiana General Assembly officially concluded its business sine die on Friday, February 27. What began as a short, non-budget session ultimately proved to be a very productive legislative session for IDA and organized dentistry. While several major policy initiatives dominated Statehouse headlines, dentistry also had a very successful session. The following legislation came into effect July 1:

IDA successfully advanced HEA 1254 and SEA 180, which included several important updates to Indiana’s dental laws. These measures modernized the state’s three-strike licensure examination rule, expanded the Indiana State Board of Dentistry’s authority to approve nitrous oxide training programs, and created a dental hygiene licensure pathway for qualified foreign-trained dentists.

Additionally, IDA successfully advocated for the inclusion of dentistry in HEA 1271. This important legislation addresses several areas of payment instability affecting dental practices, including downcoding, overpayment recoupments, and provider rate-change notifications.

Key highlights of HEA 1271 include:

HEA 1271 significantly shortens the timeframe for overpayment recoupments by generally prohibiting insurers from clawing back a paid claim more than 180 days after the claim was initially paid, except in cases of fraud. This is a substantial improvement over the current two-year window and should help protect providers from unexpected recoupments years after a claim has been processed and paid.

The new law also addresses coordination-of-benefits issues. If a payment is recouped due to a coordination-of-benefits error, providers will have 90 days to resubmit the claim to the appropriate insurer, provided they can document the original claim and subsequent recoupment. This provision should help ensure providers are appropriately compensated for services rendered when these types of billing issues occur.

HEA 1271 also establishes much-needed guardrails around downcoding. Downcoding decisions must be clinically justified and transparent and cannot be based solely on an automated process. A human reviewer must examine the relevant medical records, and the insurer must provide a clear explanation of the decision, including the clinical rationale and any coding changes. Insurers are also prohibited from downcoding claims based solely on diagnosis codes or targeting providers simply because they treat more complex patient populations. Providers retain the right to bill for the services they actually perform and will have at least 180 days to appeal a downcoding decision.

Finally, SCR 9 was unanimously adopted by the General Assembly, recognizing Indiana’s Donated Dental Services program for surpassing an incredible $20 million in donated dental care. Just as importantly, IDA successfully helped defeat SB 174, which would have prohibited community water fluoridation in Indiana.

While the 2026 legislative session has officially concluded, IDA is already looking ahead to 2027. We are currently scheduling legislative forums across the state as part of our ongoing grassroots advocacy efforts. These forums provide an important opportunity for dentists and legislators to build relationships and discuss the issues impacting the dental profession and patient care.