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Tooth Broke Tonight? Here’s What to Do Before You’re Seen
September 16, 2025

It happened on a Sunday night, of course—when most offices were closed and the kitchen sink was piled with dishes. Matt bit down on a roasted almond and heard a tiny “crack,” the kind of sound you don’t want to hear from your own mouth. At first, it felt like a grain of sand had wedged between his molars. Then came the sting when he tried to chew again. He stood there, tongue searching the sharp edge, already picturing the week ahead. Is this going to hurt all night? Can it wait until morning? Is this a crown, a filling, or something worse?
If you’re reading this because you just chipped or cracked a tooth—or you’ve got a toothache that flares when you bite down—you’re not alone. Patients in Alpharetta land in this situation every day, and the first hour matters more than you think. This guide is a calm, practical walkthrough of what to do right now, what to avoid, and how we approach your first visit so you leave comfortable and clear on the plan.

What's Really at Stake (It’s More Than “A Broken Tooth”)
It’s not the chip itself that keeps you up—it’s what it interrupts. Your morning coffee, the quick bite before a meeting, saying yes to dinner without scanning the menu for “soft.” The real problem is uncertainty: Do I need a crown? Can I save the tooth? Will this derail my week? Our job is to turn uncertainty into a clear path—relieve pain, protect what’s healthy, and choose the most conservative, durable fix that fits your life.
First Hour Playbook: Do This, Not That
Rinse, then look (don’t poke). Swish with lukewarm water to clear debris. If you see a rough edge, resist the urge to “test” it with hard foods. Your tongue will want to investigate; try not to aggravate the area.
Save the piece if it broke off. Find and keep any fragment in a clean container. Sometimes we can bond a piece back if it fits like a puzzle.
Temporary cover for sharp edges. If a corner is snagging your cheek or tongue, a tiny ball of orthodontic wax (or sugar-free gum in a pinch) can soften the edge until we see you.
Cold helps swelling, not heat. Apply a cold pack on your cheek in 10-minute bursts. Skip heat and alcohol—the goal is to quiet inflammation, not invite more.
Pain relief, smartly. Over-the-counter options can help you sleep, but avoid placing gels directly on a cracked area; numbing agents can irritate soft tissues if misused.
Call us—same-day slots exist for this. We reserve time for urgent care because that’s real life. Start here: Emergency Dentistry.

Why It Hurts When You Bite (and what that hints at)
A “high spot” after recent work
If you’ve had a recent filling or crown, a microscopic high point can overload one cusp—like a pebble in your shoe. The ligament that suspends your tooth gets sore, so biting zaps you while temperature feels normal. The fix is often a quick, precise polish that takes minutes.

A cracked cusp (the “door hinge” effect)
A thin crack lets that piece flex when you chew—open, pain; release, relief. Cold may be fine; pressure is the trigger. Stabilizing the tooth with a well-fitted dental crown (or sometimes a conservative onlay) acts like a seatbelt so the crack can’t open with every bite.
A hidden cavity near an old filling
Decay can creep under margins you can’t see. When the foundation softens, biting pushes on a thin top layer and it protests. Treatment ranges from a bonded filling to a crown, depending on how much strong enamel remains.
Bruised ligament from clenching or hard chewing
Weekend stress, new workout jaw tension, or a streak of crunchy foods can leave a tooth tender to pressure. A bite tune-up, softer foods for a couple of days, and (if needed) a custom nightguard help the ligament calm down.
“Can It Wait?” The Honest Answer
If your pain is mild and intermittent, you might make it through the night. But here’s the risk trade-off: cracks spread, sharp edges cut cheeks and tongues, and pain rarely picks a convenient moment to return. Early visits are almost always simpler, less invasive, and more affordable than the “wait and see” version. When in doubt, ask—we’ll tell you straight.
What Your First Visit Looks Like

A
calm start
We talk first. When did the pain begin? What sets it off—chewing, cold, sweets? Any recent dental work? This conversation narrows the possibilities before we even pick up a mirror.
Gentle tests that give clear answers
We take close-up photos, lightly tap to check the tooth’s ligament, use thin bite paper to see which cusp carries extra force, and do a brief temperature test to understand how the nerve responds. You’ll see the images we see, with straightforward explanations.
A clear plan forward
If a small repair will truly last, we’ll recommend that. If a crown is the best way to stop a crack from flexing, we’ll show you exactly why. And if the tooth can’t be saved (rare, but it happens), we’ll map out comfort today and a healthy replacement plan for tomorrow—often a single tooth implant when you’re ready.
Relief Can Start Today
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Matt’s Story: From Crack to Confidence
“I was bracing every bite. Now I don’t think about it at all.” — Matt, Alpharetta
Matt came in the next morning—tired, a little anxious, and carrying a mint tin with a tiny porcelain-looking shard inside. Bite testing lit up one outer cusp on a molar; cold felt normal. The close-up photo showed a hairline crack right where his tongue kept finding the sharp edge.

We smoothed the edge so he could talk without snagging and placed a protective temporary to stop flexing. A few days later, we seated a ceramic crown that matched his natural shade. At his follow-up he said, “I forgot which tooth it was until you asked.” That’s the goal: a fix so seamless you stop thinking about it.
Filling vs. Crown vs. Extraction: How We Decide With You
Think of tooth structure like a house frame. Small scuff? Touch-up paint (a small filling). Bigger missing chunk? A stronger panel (an onlay). Corner posts compromised or a crack through the frame? You need a new roof and exterior bracing—that’s a crown. If the frame has split to the foundation, removing the damaged “beam” (extraction) protects the rest of the house, with a plan to rebuild.

Longevity & value: A crown costs more up front than a filling, but if a large filling keeps failing, the “redo tax” adds up. Extraction can relieve pain fast, but replacing that tooth is key for chewing and preventing shifting—often with an implant when appropriate.
If extraction is the healthiest route, we’ll talk timing and comfort and map your replacement so you’re never left guessing. Read more about extractions here: Tooth Extraction.
What To Eat (and Avoid) While You Wait
Tonight and tomorrow, think “gentle.” Eggs, yogurt, pasta, soups, soft fruits. Avoid nuts, seeds, ice, hard candy, and sticky caramels. Chew on the comfortable side. And yes—keep brushing and flossing, especially near the gumline. Clean edges heal happier.
If you’re prone to clenching (morning jaw tightness is a clue), try a soft nightguard from the pharmacy for a night or two—not as a permanent fix, but as a temporary buffer until we see you.
Protecting Your New Restoration
Precise bite, every time
We’d rather fine-tune your bite twice today than see you for discomfort later. Even micro-high points can irritate a freshly restored tooth.
Nighttime protection for grinders
If you clench or grind, a custom nightguard helps protect crowns and natural enamel by distributing forces evenly. It reduces the risk of chips and fractures and often eases morning jaw soreness—adding meaningful longevity to your restoration.
Keep margins clean
Crowns don’t decay, but teeth do—especially at the margin where crown meets gum. Floss nightly and brush gently at the gumline to keep that interface healthy. For practical home-care coaching and cleanings, see our page on Preventative Care.
When A Tooth Can’t Be Saved (and How That’s Not the End)
Sometimes a crack runs too deep or decay has undermined too much support. When keeping the tooth would set you up for repeat emergencies, removing it is an act of prevention, not defeat. The key is replacing it so chewing, speech, and neighboring teeth stay stable.
That’s why many patients choose a single tooth implant—it looks and functions like a natural tooth without relying on the teeth next door. Timeline and cost vary by your health, bone, and goals; we’ll map it with you so there are no surprises.
The Resolution You’re Aiming For
By Friday, Matt wasn’t thinking about almonds or molars. He was back to normal meals, drinking ice water without flinching, and laughing at the idea that a tiny crack had hijacked his week. That’s the quiet win we aim for: a fix that feels like your own tooth, and the freedom to forget which one it was.
Ready to get out of limbo?
The sooner you’re seen, the simpler the solution. Start with Emergency Dentistry. If your tooth needs long-term strength, explore Dental Crowns. If replacing a tooth is the healthiest path, learn about Single Tooth Implants. And to prevent the next surprise, keep your rhythm with Preventative Care.
FAQs
Can I sleep on it or do I need to be seen tonight?
If pain is moderate and you can keep the area clean, you can usually wait until morning—but call so we can hold a spot. Severe pain, swelling, fever, or trauma calls for urgent care now. We keep room for emergencies and will advise you based on your symptoms.
Will I definitely need a crown?
Not always. Small chips or shallow cracks may be repaired conservatively. We recommend a crown when the tooth flexes under bite or there’s significant loss of structure—because stabilizing now prevents bigger breaks later. We’ll show you photos and explain the “why,” not just the “what.” Learn how crowns support cracked teeth here: Dental Crowns.
What does an emergency visit cost?
Costs depend on what’s needed to get you comfortable (exam, imaging, temporary stabilization) and the long-term fix we choose together. We’re upfront about fees, discuss options that fit your budget, and can phase care when appropriate.
What if the piece of tooth is gone?
That’s okay. Saving the fragment can help in some cases, but it’s not essential. The priority is stabilizing the tooth and preventing the crack from spreading.
Do I need antibiotics for a cracked tooth?
Not typically, unless there’s an infection or swelling. Pain from a crack is mechanical—pressure flexes the crack. Stabilizing the tooth addresses the cause. If infection is present, we’ll treat it appropriately and outline next steps.
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