ObjectivesTo evaluate the extent to which dental care factors in adulthood modify and, at the same time, mediate the association between race/ethnicity and social mobility from childhood to adulthood with two oral health outcomes in adults.MethodsIn 2012, 1222 individuals 20–59 years old participated in the second wave of the Epi‐Floripa Study in Florianopolis, Brazil. Exposures included social mobility based on adulthood and childhood events, dental care in previous years, type of dental care coverage, reason for dental visits and race. The number of missing and decayed teeth were dichotomised as MT >0 and DT >0.ResultsThe prevalence of missing and decayed teeth was 61.9% and 23.0%, respectively. Age–sex adjusted inequalities in decayed and missing teeth among Black and White individuals were 41.2 percentage points (pp) (95% CI: 3.9–78.7) and 53.1 pp (19.5:86.7), respectively. Inequalities between those persistently higher and lower in socioeconomic position were 42.6 pp (14.6–70.7) and 90.0 pp (62.1–100). The Relative Excess of Risk due to Interaction (RERI) was not statistically significant (p < 0.05). Oaxaca‐Blinder decomposition analyses showed that dental care variables accounted for a small proportion of inequalities.ConclusionsThis result implies that dental care is unlikely to significantly reduce or increase oral health inequalities in this particular population.