Overjet is the third big name in AI diagnostics and the best example of where this category goes at scale: the same technology is used on the practice side and on the insurer side. Even if you never become a customer (its focus is the US market and large groups), it's worth understanding what they do — because it's a picture of the industry we're preparing for.
Transparency note: this review is based on the manufacturer's official documentation and independent sources (listed at the bottom). I have no partnership with Overjet and earn no commission.
What Overjet is
Overjet is an AI platform for dental radiograph analysis with — by its own count — 10 FDA clearances, the most in the category. The clearances cover:
- caries and calculus detection,
- quantified bone level measurement (in millimeters, not just a "flagged zone"),
- periapical radiolucencies,
- automated charting,
- image enhancement (AI cleanup of blurry/noisy scans),
- 3D CBCT analysis.
Measuring bone loss in millimeters is particularly interesting for periodontology — more on that use case in AI in periodontology.
Overjet Voice: hands-free documentation
In early 2026 Overjet made Voice generally available — a voice system that generates clinical notes, perio charts and draft referral letters while you work. One large US group announced a rollout across 216 locations. Voice documentation is a trend I described earlier in AI clinical notes — Overjet is currently the most aggressive player in that race.
The other side: insurers
What makes Overjet unique: it connects to over 300 (US) payers and performs coverage checks down to individual code level. In other words — the same technology that helps a dentist document a finding also helps the insurer assess the claim.
For most of us this matters more as a signal than as a product: when AI standardizes both the finding and its assessment, documentation based on measurable data ("bone loss 4.2 mm") becomes the norm. Whoever gets used to that earlier will work more easily in that environment.
What it costs and who it's for
Pricing is quote-only (by system size, location count and modules), and the platform is built "enterprise-first": large chains and multi-location groups get the most out of it. For an individual practice, Diagnocat or Pearl are the more realistic starting points — watch Overjet as an industry barometer.
What to watch out for (applies to the whole category)
- A finding is not a diagnosis — AI flags and measures; the clinical decision is yours. The principle is unpacked in AI and dental X-rays.
- Cloud scans are personal data — the data-processing agreement comes first; the vendor question list is in patient privacy and AI.
- Availability for your market — check directly; the company's focus is the US.
In short
- Overjet: 10 FDA clearances — detection, bone measurement in mm, image enhancement, CBCT, charting.
- Voice: automatic voice-driven clinical documentation (generally available since early 2026).
- The only major player present with both practices and insurers (300+ US payers).
- Enterprise focus and quote-only pricing — for an individual practice, more a trend signal than a purchase.
- Measurable, standardized documentation is where the industry is heading — worth getting used to.
Where all of this fits in the bigger picture — in the complete guide to AI in dentistry; the tools-by-purpose overview is on the AI tools page.



