LIVE MARKET·33,620 POSTINGS · LAST 180 DAYS

Dental salaries: $32.07/hr median.

Dental professionals deliver oral healthcare across general dentistry, hygiene, and dental-surgical specialties.

Showing 4 titles (4 with pay data) across 4 tracks and 103 states. Latest data as of April 30, 2026.

Titles
4
4 with data
Postings
33,620
33,561 unique
Median /hr
$32.07
$66,700/yr
Tracks
4
103 states
04·WHERE DENTAL PAYS·POSTING-WEIGHTED MEDIAN

Dental pay across every state with live data.

01Alabama154 postings
$22.90/hr
02Alaska43 postings
$39.35/hr
03Arizona661 postings
$31.05/hr
04Arkansas91 postings
$28.47/hr
05California3,435 postings
$33.80/hr
06Colorado858 postings
$35.85/hr
07Connecticut389 postings
$32.70/hr
08Delaware31 postings
$31.69/hr
09District Of Columbia42 postings
$35.62/hr
10Florida1,916 postings
$26.75/hr
11Georgia540 postings
$28.00/hr
12Hawaii63 postings
$28.33/hr
13Idaho150 postings
$32.48/hr
14Illinois1,180 postings
$33.91/hr
15Indiana518 postings
$31.98/hr
16Iowa153 postings
$30.43/hr
17Kansas188 postings
$27.42/hr
18Kentucky318 postings
$27.14/hr
19Louisiana205 postings
$24.20/hr
20Maine47 postings
$37.52/hr
21Maryland625 postings
$35.76/hr
22Massachusetts904 postings
$36.80/hr
23Michigan753 postings
$32.58/hr
24Minnesota480 postings
$42.89/hr
25Mississippi77 postings
$28.05/hr
26Missouri509 postings
$33.90/hr
27Montana41 postings
$33.46/hr
28Nebraska126 postings
$33.04/hr
29Nevada296 postings
$34.62/hr
30New Hampshire148 postings
$33.11/hr
31New Jersey1,097 postings
$35.85/hr
32New Mexico156 postings
$27.27/hr
33New York1,764 postings
$33.88/hr
34North Carolina849 postings
$33.69/hr
35North Dakota28 postings
$33.00/hr
36Ohio1,130 postings
$29.72/hr
37Oklahoma185 postings
$31.95/hr
38Oregon413 postings
$39.99/hr
39Pennsylvania1,240 postings
$31.21/hr
40Rhode Island72 postings
$35.50/hr
41South Carolina370 postings
$32.95/hr
42South Dakota49 postings
$33.98/hr
43Tennessee475 postings
$27.75/hr
44Texas2,257 postings
$26.94/hr
45Utah258 postings
$28.03/hr
46Vermont23 postings
$36.96/hr
47Virginia927 postings
$35.93/hr
48Washington953 postings
$40.16/hr
49West Virginia60 postings
$27.90/hr
50Wisconsin477 postings
$34.85/hr
51Wyoming21 postings
$37.79/hr

Showing all 51 states with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.

05·HOW TO BECOME·CAREER PATHWAY

How to become a Dental.

Dental professionals diagnose, prevent, and treat conditions of the teeth, gums, and oral cavity. The category covers the full team: dentists (DDS/DMD), dental hygienists, dental assistants, and dental lab technicians. Each role has a distinct educational pathway and credentialing exam, with very different scope and pay levels.

Education·Min: Certificate (assistant) to Doctorate (dentist) · Preferred: Role-dependent: DDS/DMD, RDH, CDA

Each role has its own ladder. Dentist: bachelor's (with DAT) → 4-year DDS/DMD → INBDE → state license. Hygienist: 2-4 year accredited program → NBDHE + state clinical exam → state license. Assistant: certificate or on-the-job → DANB CDA exam (varies by state). All roles renew licensure with continuing education.

DegreeDurationNotes
Doctor of Dental Surgery / Doctor of Medicine in DentistryDDS / DMD4 years post-bachelorBoth degrees are equivalent. Required for dentist licensure. Accredited programs (CODA) include 2 years preclinical + 2 years clinical training.
Specialty residencyCert / MS2-6 years post-DDSRequired for the 12 ADA-recognized specialties: orthodontics, oral surgery, endodontics, periodontics, pediatric dentistry, prosthodontics, oral pathology, oral radiology, dental public health, oral medicine, orofacial pain, dental anesthesiology.
Dental hygiene degreeAS / BS2-4 yearsAssociate or bachelor's degree from a CODA-accredited program. Eligible for the NBDHE and state clinical exam to become an RDH.
Dental assisting certificateCert9-12 monthsShort program covering chairside assisting, radiography, and infection control. Many states allow on-the-job training as well, but a certificate plus DANB credential accelerates pay and scope.
Licenses & Exams·3 credentials
State dental licenseDentist license (DDS/DMD)Required
Exam: INBDE + state/regional clinical exam · Issued by: State Board of Dentistry

Required to practice dentistry. Eligibility requires graduation from a CODA-accredited program, passing the INBDE, and passing a state or regional clinical exam.

Dental hygienist licenseRegistered Dental Hygienist (RDH)Required
Exam: NBDHE + state clinical exam · Issued by: State Board of Dentistry

Required to practice dental hygiene. Eligibility requires graduation from an accredited program, passing the NBDHE, and passing a state clinical exam.

DANB CDA credentialCertified Dental AssistantOptional
Exam: CDA exam · Issued by: Dental Assisting National Board

Required for expanded-function dental assistants in many states. Optional but strongly preferred elsewhere.

Optional Certifications·Pay boost where known
CredentialIssued byPay impact
ADA specialty board
Specialty board certification (12 recognized specialties)
Specialty practice (ortho, oral surgery, endo, perio, pedo, prostho) materially increases scope and compensation.
ADA-recognized specialty board+30-100%
DANB CDA / EFDA
Certified Dental Assistant / Expanded Function Dental Assistant
Expanded-function credentials let assistants place fillings, take impressions, and perform other reversible procedures under dentist supervision.
DANB+5-15%
Local anesthesia / nitrous certificate
Local anesthesia administration permit
Lets hygienists administer local anesthesia in states that permit it. Standard upgrade for high-volume hygiene practices.
State Board of Dentistry+5-10%
Career Path·5 steps
  1. 0-3 years
    Dental assistant

    Chairside support, sterilization, radiographs, and patient prep. Common entry into the field for those exploring dental school or hygiene programs.

  2. 0+ years (with RDH license)
    Dental hygienist

    Independent scope for prophylaxis, scaling, periodontal therapy, and patient education. Many offices structure hygiene as a separate clinical track with its own column.

  3. 0-5 years post-DDS/DMD
    Associate dentist

    Newly licensed dentist working as an associate in a private practice or DSO group. Typically paid on a daily guarantee plus production percentage.

  4. 5-10 years
    Specialist or Senior Associate

    Completed specialty residency (ortho, oral surgery, endo, etc.) or established generalist with predictable production. Often the partnership-track point in private practice.

  5. 10+ years
    Practice owner / Partner

    Owns or co-owns the practice. Production-plus-ownership compensation, with the corresponding business risk.

Work Environment
Private practice (solo and group)DSO / corporate dental groupsCommunity health centers (FQHCs)Hospital-based oral surgery / dental anesthesiaPublic health and academic clinicsMobile and school dental programs

Schedule. Most dental practices run 4-5 day workweeks during business hours. Saturday hours are common in DSO and corporate practices. Hospital oral surgery and dental anesthesiology can include trauma call.

Physical demands. Long stretches in static seated posture leaning over patients. MSK strain (neck, lower back, hands) is a known long-term issue. Magnification loupes and ergonomic chairs are standard.

Job Outlook·Steady
+4-7% (2022-2032)

Dental demand is steady, driven by an aging population and steady cosmetic / orthodontic interest. Dental hygiene is one of the faster-growing healthcare occupations. The dentist market is shifting toward DSO employment for new graduates, with private-practice ownership now typically reached later in a career.

FAQ — Becoming this role·3 questions
How long does it take to become a dentist?

8 years minimum: 4-year bachelor's (with DAT and prerequisites) + 4-year DDS/DMD. Add 2-6 years for a specialty residency.

Dentist vs hygienist — which is harder to enter?

Dental school admission is competitive — averaging an ~8% acceptance rate. Hygiene programs are also competitive at the seat-count level but require a much shorter total time investment (2-4 years vs. 8+).

Do dental assistants need certification?

Requirements vary widely by state. Some states allow on-the-job training; many require DANB CDA certification or radiology certification before performing intraoral imaging or expanded-function tasks. Check your state board's specific requirements.