Oral Health Grants in Australia: Funding Dental Access for All

Oral health is foundational to overall health — yet Australia has significant oral health inequity. Approximately 3 in 10 Australians avoid dental care due to cost. People in rural and remote areas have significantly less access to dental services. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians have among the worst oral health outcomes in the developed world. The public dental system is underfunded and overwhelmed. Grant funding supports community dental clinics, Indigenous oral health programmes, oral health literacy, and the advocacy that pushes for improved public dental investment.

Oral health in Australia

The equity gap

  • Approximately 30% of Australians avoid dental care because of cost
  • Australia has no universal public dental scheme (unlike Medicare for general health)
  • Adult public dental waiting lists: years in most states
  • Rural areas: severe dental workforce shortage
  • Indigenous Australians: tooth decay and gum disease rates among the highest in the developed world

Why oral health matters

  • Dental pain affects eating, sleep, work, and school attendance
  • Gum disease is linked to cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and adverse pregnancy outcomes
  • Poor oral health affects social participation and self-esteem
  • Oral cancer (tobacco and alcohol-linked) is a significant cause of mortality

Children's oral health

  • Childhood dental decay is Australia's most common chronic childhood disease
  • Over half of Australian children have experienced dental decay by age 6
  • Dental decay causes thousands of preventable childhood hospitalisations annually
  • School dental service coverage varies significantly by state

Government oral health funding

Child Dental Benefits Schedule

Medicare-funded dental for eligible children (up to $1,000 over two years).

State/Territory public dental services

  • Public dental clinics (long waiting lists)
  • School dental services (state-administered)
  • Emergency dental in some emergency departments

Australian Government Dental Scheme

Some targeted funding for Commonwealth concession card holders.

Residential Aged Care

Some aged care dental funding.

Philanthropic oral health funders

Dental Health Services Victoria (DHSV)

State public dental authority — some philanthropic activities.

Australian Dental Association (ADA)

Advocacy and some community programmes.

Smiles 4 Miles

Early childhood oral health — rural Queensland.

Toothwatch Australia

Advocacy for universal dental care.

Various community health foundations

Some fund community dental services.

Types of funded oral health programmes

Community dental clinics

  • Free or low-cost dental clinics
  • Community health centre dental services
  • Pop-up dental clinics in disadvantaged areas
  • Mobile dental units (rural and remote)

Indigenous oral health

  • Community-controlled oral health services
  • Aboriginal health worker oral health training
  • Mobile dental services in remote communities
  • Indigenous children's oral health programmes
  • Fluoride varnish programmes for Indigenous children

School-based oral health

  • School dental services
  • In-school dental screening
  • Fluoride varnish in schools
  • Toothbrushing programmes
  • Dental hygienist visits to low-income schools

Early childhood

  • Early childhood caries prevention
  • Baby teeth matter programmes
  • Parent education on infant oral health
  • Fluoride varnish for high-risk infants

Oral health literacy

  • Community oral health education
  • Healthy eating for teeth
  • Sugar reduction awareness
  • Oral hygiene skills building

Fluoridation advocacy

  • Water fluoridation is the most cost-effective oral health intervention
  • Some remote communities lack fluoridated water
  • Advocacy for universal fluoridation

Aged care oral health

  • Oral health in residential aged care
  • Training aged care staff to support oral hygiene
  • Dementia and oral health
  • Oral health assessments in aged care

Oral cancer

  • Oral cancer awareness (tobacco and alcohol users)
  • Early detection screening
  • Oral cancer treatment support

Research

  • Oral health epidemiology
  • Intervention research
  • Fluoridation efficacy
  • Oral health workforce research

The adult dental gap

While children's dental care has some government support, adult public dental in Australia is severely underfunded:
- Waiting lists of 2-5+ years for public dental
- Emergency extractions (pulling teeth) rather than restorative treatment
- People resorting to emergency departments for dental pain
- Dental pain is a major driver of emergency presentations

Advocacy for universal dental care — bringing dental into Medicare — has gained momentum. The ALP government has committed to some expanded dental coverage. Grant funding for advocacy towards universal dental care addresses the system gap.

Grant application considerations

Indigenous oral health

Given the severity of Indigenous oral health inequity, applications specifically addressing Indigenous oral health — through community-controlled services, mobile dental, or oral health workers — are high-priority.

Children's early intervention

Childhood dental decay is largely preventable. Applications for school dental programmes, fluoride varnish, and parent education in high-decay communities are cost-effective prevention investments.

Rural access

Rural dental access is severely limited by workforce shortage. Applications that extend rural dental access — through mobile units, visiting dentists, telehealth assessment, or workforce development — address a genuine equity gap.

Advocacy for system change

Individual dental programmes treat the symptom; universal dental care treats the cause. Applications that combine direct service with advocacy for systemic change are more ambitious.


Tahua's grants management platform supports oral health funders and community dental organisations — with patient tracking, treatment outcome data, community reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help oral health funders demonstrate their investment in dental access and equity for all Australians.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →