Accueil / Vaud / ‘For the reimbursement of dental care’ initiative
Refusée Vaud Sécurité sociale, santé et prévoyance 04 mars 2018

‘For the reimbursement of dental care’ initiative

On 4 March 2018, Vaud voters decide on an unusual initiative: 'For the reimbursement of dental care'. Launched in 2014 by the communist PdA and solidaritéS with some 15,000 signatures, it seeks to bring the mouth into the welfare system…

Oui — 42.4% Non — 57.6%
Participation : 55.7% · POP et solidaritéS
L'enjeu de l'époque

On 4 March 2018, Vaud voters decide on an unusual initiative: 'For the reimbursement of dental care'. Launched in 2014 by the communist PdA and solidaritéS with some 15,000 signatures, it seeks to bring the mouth into the welfare system — dental care being the great absentee of health insurance.

The text proposes to enshrine in the cantonal constitution a compulsory dental insurance, financed on the AHV pension model through equal contributions from employers and employees. The cost is estimated at around 350 million francs a year.

The left, the unions and part of the cantonal government see a major social advance; the right and business circles denounce an unbearable burden on firms. Health minister Pierre-Yves Maillard (Socialist) had floated a counter-proposal funded by a sugary-drinks levy, but it was swept aside in parliament. Voters therefore decide on the initiative alone.

Methodological note — AfterVote only adjudicates verifiable arguments in light of the facts observed since the vote. Promises and fears that remain open or unverifiable are left undecided.
▲ The No camp prevails
The initiative is rejected: 57.6% no. Turnout: 55.7%.
▼ The Yes camp
The initiative (PdA, solidaritéS, the left, the unions) gathers only 42.4% yes — not enough.

The actors involved

▲ Yes camp
PdA and solidaritéS (sponsors)
Vaud Socialists and Greens
• The centre (Christian Democrats)
• Trade unions and various associations
• Part of the cantonal government, including Socialist health minister Pierre-Yves Maillard (author of a counter-proposal)
▼ No camp
• The Liberals (PLR), unanimously opposed
• The SVP
• The Vaud Employers' Federation (Christophe Reymond, secretary-general)
• Business circles

Arguments and verdicts

▲ Arguments FOR (Yes camp)
Dental care is the great absentee of insurance
Sponsors denounced access reserved for those who can pay.
✓~ Diagnosis confirmed, solution rejected.
The coverage gap remained real: without insurance, dental health stayed 'a private matter'. A 2023 motion to help the poorest was even rejected.
Source: Le Temps; Vaud cantonal parliament.
Without a solution, the problem will return
Sponsors warned that doing nothing would merely postpone the issue.
✓ Confirmed.
The subject did not disappear: after the 2018 no and the rejection of a targeted-aid motion in 2023, a new dental-care reimbursement initiative was launched in 2025.
Source: solidaritéS Vaud, 2025.
▼ Arguments AGAINST (No camp)
A new insurance would cost too much (~350 million/year)
'One more Vaud peculiarity' for firms, said Christophe Reymond (Employers' Federation).
✓ Burden avoided.
The no waived the compulsory contribution: the roughly 350 million annual burden and the feared employer levy never materialised. The budgetary status quo was preserved.
Source: 24 heures; Vaud Employers' Federation.
Dental health calls for targeted aid, not universal insurance
Opponents preferred support for the poorest over coverage for all.
✓~ Partly followed.
The canton opted for a targeted prevention-and-care scheme rather than universal coverage. But targeted aid stayed modest: a 2023 motion to expand it was rejected.
Source: Canton of Vaud (government); cantonal parliament.

The outcome, since 2018

Six years on, Vaud dental health remained a private matter. The no waived the compulsory contribution and its cost, but the gap the sponsors denounced was not closed — so much so that the issue came back to the table.

04.03.2018
Date of the vote
42.4%
Yes (rejected)
55.7%
Turnout
~350m
Annual cost avoided (est.)
Of note — Since the no, the canton has favoured targeted prevention-and-care measures over universal insurance. A 2023 motion to widen aid for the poorest was rejected, and solidaritéS relaunched an initiative in 2025.
Analyse éditoriale
Conclusion

Voting on teeth means voting on the shifting line between solidarity and individual responsibility. In 2018 Vaud voters set the cursor on the wallet side: 57.6% no, despite a united left and an inventive health minister.

Cost weighed more than compassion. The 350-million argument and the talk of a patronal 'peculiarity' landed in a canton fond of social progress but not always of the bills that come with it.

Yet the problem did not vanish with the ballot. Without insurance the gap remains; targeted aid was rejected in 2023 and the issue set off again with a new initiative in 2025. Vaud's teeth have not finished sending people to the polls.