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SB 1533

SB 1533 - This act establishes the Interstate Dental and Dental Hygienist Licensure Compact ("Compact"), which facilitates the interstate practice of dentistry and dental hygiene and provides for dentists and dental hygienists licensed in a participating state to have expedited licensure portability in other participating states. The Compact creates a joint government agency ("Commission") and provides for its powers and duties, including overseeing the administration of the Compact, issuing advisory opinions and training on the Compact, and enforce compliance with the Compact. Additionally, each state's dental board shall have two voting members on the Commission, with one member required to be a member of the Missouri Dental Board. States shall submit all actions and documents determined by the Commission to the Clearinghouse, which is described in the act as the clearinghouse and databank administered by the American Association of Dental Boards that houses adverse actions and denials of licensure from the state dental boards. Insurance companies and entities verifying documents for the purposes of licenses to dentists or dental hygienists may seek information from the Clearinghouse for public record documents. The Compact sets forth the requirements for a dentist or dental hygienist to obtain and exercise the ability to practice in other participating states with the home state's dental board determining the eligibility of an application for a compact license privilege. The Compact further provides that a dentist or dental hygienist with compact privilege shall be subject to and comply with the laws and regulations of the participating state in which they seek to practice and shall be subject to that state's dental board. Appeals of a denial of a compact privilege application shall be filed with the home state within thirty days of the denial. Additionally, a licensee shall notify the Commission within ten days of any adverse action taken against his or her license in a state that is not a member of the Compact. Home states may take adverse actions against a holder of a compact license privilege regardless of where the actions occurred and any participating state where the compact licensee holds a compact license privilege may investigate an allegation of a violation of the laws and rules of the practice of dentistry or dental hygiene in any other state where the licensee holds a compact license privilege. Participating states may also participate together in joint investigations of compact licensees. Dental boards issuing a compact license privilege may also impose a fee for such privilege, except no fee shall be required for any active-duty military member or their spouse for up to one year after separation from the service. Furthermore, the Compact shall become active and binding upon the fifth state's enactment of the Compact. Any participating state may withdraw from the Compact by repealing the Compact, but the Compact shall remain in effect until six months after the date of withdrawal. This act is identical to SB 109 (2025) and HB 1290 (2025). KATIE O'BRIEN

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Justin Brown

Missouri proposes joining an interstate compact allowing dentists and hygienists to practice across state lines with single license, streamlining access but raising questions about regulatory consistency and accountability.

Second Read and Referred S Emerging Issues and Professional Registration Committee
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Bill Summary · SB 1533

Legislative bill overview

SB 1533 establishes an interstate compact allowing dentists and dental hygienists to practice across state lines under a single license rather than obtaining separate licenses in each state. The compact creates a coordinating body to set standards, facilitate credential recognition, and streamline the licensure process for participating states.

Why is this important

Current licensing requirements force dental professionals to obtain separate licenses in each state where they practice, creating significant time and financial barriers that contribute to dental care shortages in underserved areas. Interstate compacts can improve access to dental services in rural and underserved communities while reducing administrative burden on professionals, though implementation depends on how many states ultimately adopt the compact.

Potential points of contention

  • Professional standards variation: Different states have varying education requirements, continuing education standards, and scope-of-practice rules; the compact must balance uniformity with legitimate state regulatory differences
  • Interstate accountability concerns: Questions about how patient complaints, disciplinary actions, and malpractice in one state are communicated and enforced across compact member states
  • State revenue and autonomy: States may lose licensing fee revenue and fear reduced regulatory control over who practices dentistry within their borders

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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