TL;DR — What You Need Tonight
Buys time, not a cure. Alternate ibuprofen + paracetamol. Dab clove oil on the tooth. Rinse with warm saltwater. Cold compress on cheek. Sleep with head elevated. Call NHS 111 for urgent dental help. Go to A&E for red flags: spreading swelling, fever, trouble breathing.
Toothache is a uniquely brutal, all-consuming pain. It throbs relentlessly, makes it impossible to concentrate, eat, or sleep — and if you’re reading this in the UK at 2am, you might also be facing the very real frustration of a long wait for an NHS dentist appointment. You’re in pain *now*, and you need practical honest advice for relief tonight, not platitudes. This guide explains which home remedies have actual evidence behind them, what you should absolutely avoid, and — critically — when your toothache becomes a medical emergency that needs more than home care. We’ll cover safe pain management while you navigate the system to get the proper treatment you actually need.
The Honest Truth: Home Remedies Don’t Cure Toothache
Let’s be clear from the start: home remedies for toothache are a holding measure. The pain you’re feeling is a signal — a warning light — that something is wrong. That could be dental decay reaching the nerve, an abscess (a pocket of infection), a cracked tooth, or advanced gum disease.
Home remedies = bucket bailing a leaking boat
No rinse, oil, or compress can fix the underlying decay or infection. It stops you sinking temporarily, but it doesn’t patch the hole. Without professional dental treatment, the problem will almost certainly get worse — potentially leading to severe infection, tooth loss, or significantly more complex treatment later.
- Pain = signal of underlying decay, abscess, or infection
- Without a dentist, the problem worsens
- UK NHS dental wait times = 6-18 months in many regions (Healthwatch UK)
This makes effective interim pain management essential — but it also makes booking that dentist appointment as soon as possible a critical priority. Don’t let a temporary reduction in pain lull you into a false sense of security. Use the relief window to contact your NHS practice, call NHS 111 for guidance, or if you can afford it, explore private dental care. Your goal is to get to the root of the problem, not just silence the alarm bell.
What Actually Works (Evidence-Backed)
When you need relief tonight, focus on methods with scientific backing or official endorsement. Goal: reduce pain and inflammation safely.
1. Ibuprofen + Paracetamol (Alternating)
How: Alternate doses (e.g., ibuprofen 8am, paracetamol 11am, ibuprofen 2pm).
Frequency: Every 3-4 hours, never exceeding daily max.
Why it works: Ibuprofen reduces inflammation, paracetamol blocks pain signals. Alternating gives consistent relief.
2. Clove Oil (Eugenol)
How: Dab tiny drop on cotton ball, apply to affected tooth/gum.
Frequency: As needed, don’t overuse.
Why it works: Eugenol is a natural antiseptic and local anaesthetic used in dentistry for centuries.
3. Warm Saltwater Rinse
How: Dissolve ½ tsp salt in warm water, swish 30 seconds, spit.
Frequency: Several times daily.
Why it works: Cleanses area, reduces bacteria, draws out fluid to ease swelling.
4. Cold Compress
How: Wrap ice pack/frozen peas in towel, hold to cheek 15 mins.
Frequency: 15 mins on, 15 mins off.
Why it works: Constricts blood vessels, numbs area, reduces inflammation.
5. Sleep Elevated
How: Use extra pillows to prop head up.
Frequency: All night.
Why it works: Reduces blood pressure to head, lessens nighttime throbbing.
Dangerous “Remedies” to AVOID
In desperation, it’s tempting to try anything. But some common suggestions are genuinely harmful. Knowing what NOT to do is as important as knowing what helps.
What NOT to Do
- Aspirin directly on gum — causes chemical burns.
- Whisky/spirits rinse — dries tissue, irritates.
- Undiluted essential oils on gum — burns.
- DIY filling kits — trap bacteria, cause damage.
- Crushed garlic on gum — chemical burn risk.
- Heat pack on cheek — spreads infection.
When to Call NHS 111
NHS 111 — your first call for urgent dental
NHS 111 should be your first call when you have a dental problem that can’t wait for a regular appointment but isn’t a 999-level emergency. They’re the UK’s official triage service for urgent medical and dental concerns, available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The call is free from any phone.
- Free from any phone
- 24/7 availability
- Can refer to emergency dental clinic
Have ready: symptoms + when started + painkillers tried + NHS number
When to Go to A&E (Red Flags)
A&E or 999 IMMEDIATELY if…
- Facial swelling spreading (down neck, eye, under tongue)
- Difficulty swallowing or breathing
- Fever 38°C+ with dental pain
- Eye swelling with dental pain
- Knocked-out tooth (handle by crown, milk if can’t reseat)
Spreading dental infections (Ludwig’s angina) can be life-threatening — don’t wait.
Preventing the Next Toothache
NHS daily oral care basics
- Brush 2 min twice daily with fluoride toothpaste
- Don’t rinse with water after brushing (just spit)
- Floss or use interdental brushes daily
- Reduce sugar (keep to mealtimes only)
- Dentist check-up every 6-12 months
- Mouthguard if grinding (bruxism)
What Readers Are Telling Us
“Clove oil + ibuprofen got me through 3 nights until emergency dentist appointment.”
★★★★★
“NHS 111 referred me to emergency dental clinic same day. Saved me from A&E.”
★★★★★
“Tried whisky on gum — DON’T. Burned the gum, made everything worse.”
★☆☆☆☆
“Saltwater rinse 4x daily plus paracetamol. Manageable until private appointment.”
★★★★☆
Frequently Asked Questions
Manage tonight. Book a dentist tomorrow. A&E if red flags.
Toothache demands immediate action, and navigating long NHS dental waits genuinely adds to the stress. Remember: home remedies are your temporary toolkit — for symptom management only, never a cure. Use evidence-backed methods like clove oil, saltwater rinses, cold compresses, and smart alternating OTC painkiller use to get through the night safely.
But your primary goal must be to see a dentist as soon as humanly possible. For urgent advice, make NHS 111 your first call — it’s free, 24/7, and can get you into an emergency dental clinic. And if you spot any red flags like spreading swelling, fever, or difficulty breathing, treat it as a medical emergency and go to A&E without delay. Stay safe, and don’t ignore the signal your body is sending you.
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Last reviewed: 25 April 2026 · Next review: 25 April 2029
Walton Surgery · NHS UK · All guides are evidence-based and NHS-aligned.
