Dental care provider gaps, by state

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California has 565 dental professional shortage areas, the most of any state, according to new data from the Health Resources and Services Administration.

The HRSA recently published a report on health professional shortage areas in the U.S. for the first quarter of 2026. The report includes data on shortages for primary care, mental healthcare and dental care.

Here is the latest data on dental shortages, including the total number of HRSA-designated shortage areas, the percent of needs met and the number of practitioners needed to fill care gaps:

StateTotal designationsPercent of needs metPractitioners needed
Alabama9224.3%139
Alaska33333.8%60
Arizona22934.7%381
Arkansas13833.4%107
California56536%475
Colorado11657.8%92
Connecticut4232.8%98
Delaware124.4%104
Florida28318.7%1,271
Georgia18617.8%402
Hawaii3336.5%39
Idaho9837.5%70
Illinois24828.3%383
Indiana13327.8%207
Iowa14827.3%107
Kansas13329.5%49
Kentucky22610.4%219
Louisiana17645.8%260
Maine8427.9%42
Maryland4243%229
Massachusetts5662.1%20
Michigan26830.1%278
Minnesota19843.8%133
Mississippi15140.1%212
Missouri32920.9%324
Montana11545.9%32
Nebraska11449.7%13
Nevada6626.2%156
New Hampshire2121.6%7
New Jersey3950.8%32
New Mexico10421.4%165
New York16316.2%588
North Carolina20923%657
North Dakota7040.4%14
Ohio18439.6%411
Oklahoma18741.6%175
Oregon14440.8%162
Pennsylvania15340%268
Rhode Island1538%33
South Carolina9647.9%227
South Dakota10026.7%47
Tennessee16230.8%396
Texas27529.9%362
Utah6049.6%23
Vermont1377.6%0
Virginia17853%296
Washington20458%219
Washington, D.C.102.9%22
West Virginia12322.6%140
Wisconsin16529.3%205
Wyoming3031.5%11
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