Common at night in kids — usually harmless. In this guide our pediatric dental team explains, in plain parent language, everything you need to know about bruxism (teeth grinding). You will learn what it is, when it matters, how it is handled by a board-certified pediatric dentist, what your child will experience during and after the appointment, and how to prevent problems in the future. We also link to related conditions, treatments, age-stage guides and location pages so you can find a trusted pediatric dentist near you the moment you decide to act.
Why this habit matters for growing smiles
Up to 30% of children grind their teeth at night. Most stop on their own by age 8. A pediatric dentist will monitor wear and, if the enamel is chipping or the child has jaw pain, make a soft night guard.
How to start it gently
Modern pediatric dentistry is very different from the dentistry most parents remember from their own childhood. Techniques are gentler, appointments are shorter, and behavior-guidance is built into every step of supporting this habit. Your dentist will use kid-scale instruments, tell-show-do communication, and — when appropriate — nitrous oxide (laughing gas) or minimal sedation so that even anxious kids leave with a smile. Nothing is done without your explicit consent as the parent or carer.
Signs it is (or isn't) working
After the appointment, most children go back to normal activities the same day. Your dentist will send you home with clear written aftercare instructions covering food, drinks, brushing, pain relief (if needed) and any warning signs to watch for. If a follow-up visit is required, it is booked before you leave the clinic — never left to memory. We strongly recommend saving the clinic's after-hours phone number to your phone the moment your child becomes a patient.
When to escalate to a pediatric dentist
Cost varies significantly by country, city and insurance plan. Our worldwide pricing map at /pricing shows real 2026 price ranges from verified pediatric clinics, and our directory at /kids-dentists-near-me lets you filter for clinics that accept your specific insurer. If you're weighing dental tourism, our /dental-tourism guide walks through when it makes sense and when it doesn't — especially for children, where continuity of care matters even more than for adults.
What makes it different
Affects up to 30% of kids
A key point about bruxism (teeth grinding) our pediatric dentists want every parent to know.
Usually stops by age 8
A key point about bruxism (teeth grinding) our pediatric dentists want every parent to know.
Night guard rarely needed
A key point about bruxism (teeth grinding) our pediatric dentists want every parent to know.
Rule out reflux and sleep issues
A key point about bruxism (teeth grinding) our pediatric dentists want every parent to know.
How it works
- 1
Explain the habit in kid language
Use our verified directory to find a pediatric dentist near you and book the first visit for bruxism (teeth grinding).
- 2
Model it together every day
Your dentist will explain everything about bruxism (teeth grinding) in plain language before starting anything.
- 3
Track progress without pressure
The core appointment is short, kid-friendly and adapted to your child's age and cooperation.
- 4
Celebrate small wins
Follow the written aftercare notes; they cover food, brushing and any pain relief safely.
- 5
Review with your dentist at check-ups
Book the next preventive visit so bruxism (teeth grinding) stays a small, manageable topic — never an emergency.
Quick facts
- Affects up to 30% of kids
- Usually stops by age 8
- Night guard rarely needed
- Rule out reflux and sleep issues
This page is medically reviewed by pediatric dentists in the Baby Tooth Doctor network. It's educational information, not a diagnosis — always consult a board-certified pediatric dentist for your child's specific case.