Gap forming between teeth.
This is a signal, not a diagnosis. A new gap often means teeth are moving. The pattern matters more than the space. A calm exam confirms whether this is stable drift or a support change pattern.
§ 01 · Definition
A new gap is often a movement signal, not just a cosmetic change.
Support changes, inflammation, and bite drift can all contribute.
The exam confirms stability and protects long term outcomes.
§ 02 · When to act immediately
When to act immediately.
- Teeth feel loose
- Bleeding and swelling are worsening
- You taste drainage or bad taste
- Chewing becomes hard to tolerate
- The gap is progressing quickly
- Swelling is spreading into the face or neck
- Fever occurs or you feel sick
- Swallowing feels difficult
- Breathing feels affected
This page helps you sort patterns. It does not replace an exam. If you are unsure, a calm evaluation is the right move.
§ 03 · Patterns
Common patterns and what they can mean.
Patterns guide urgency. The exam confirms the cause. The goal is to avoid guessing, because guessing often leads to repeated dentistry.
Support change and periodontal patterns.
When support changes, teeth can drift and spacing can appear.
Gaps paired with bleeding or teeth looking longer should be evaluated for stability.
We measure pocket depth and assess bone support patterns.
Dark triangles near the gumline.
Dark triangles often appear when gum tissue changes or when teeth shift slightly.
This can be a support signal, not only a cosmetic issue.
We confirm whether the pattern is stable or progressing.
Bite drift and missing support teeth.
When bite support changes, teeth can drift. Contacts change. Spacing appears.
If your bite feels different too, this is often a system level signal.
We evaluate bite stability and whether force is shifting the system over time.
Retainers and holding strategies.
Retainers can hold teeth in place, but they do not solve a progressing support problem.
Holding is only safe when the system is stable.
We confirm stability first, then discuss whether holding or orthodontic correction is appropriate.
§ 04 · Evaluation
What we evaluate.
We do not treat symptoms well by guessing. We identify the pattern and evaluate long-term stability before decisions are made.
We measure remaining tooth structure, restoration margins, cracks, and enamel loss. Structure sets the ceiling for what a tooth can tolerate.
The decision changes when reserve is thin, cracks are active, or the seal is compromised.
We check bite contacts, overload patterns, and whether a tooth is being asked to carry too much force.
The decision changes when force repeatedly lands on weak zones and triggers symptoms.
We look at duration, frequency, and whether triggers are becoming easier to activate. Time reveals whether things are stabilizing or escalating.
The decision changes when symptoms are trending worse, not just present.
We ask what choice is most likely to stay stable over years, not just what stops symptoms today.
The decision changes when a quick fix would predictably lead to repeat dentistry.
For the deeper decision layer, the Keep Your Teeth Framework explains how we evaluate stability before irreversible treatment.
Why acting too fast can be harmful.
Spacing changes can lead to quick cosmetic decisions before confirming stability.
We do not recommend irreversible treatment based on symptoms alone.
Confirm first. Then choose the cleanest next step. That is how you avoid repeated dentistry.
What you can do right now.
If symptoms are mild:
- Brush gently and floss consistently
- Avoid testing the gap repeatedly
- Schedule a visit for evaluation
Track these details before your visit:
- When the gap started and whether it is changing
- Whether bleeding or swelling is present
- Whether teeth feel loose or bite feels different
If swelling or severe symptoms are present:
- Call us
- Do not wait for it to go away on its own
§ 05 · FAQ
Common questions.
Why is a gap forming between my teeth
A new gap often means teeth are moving. Common drivers include inflammation and support change, shifting bite contacts, missing support teeth, and long term drift. The exam confirms whether this is cosmetic spacing or a stability signal.
Is a new gap a sign of gum disease
It can be. When support changes, teeth can drift and gaps can appear. If a gap is paired with bleeding, swelling, or teeth looking longer, evaluation matters.
Why do I see a dark triangle near the gumline
Dark triangles often appear when gum tissue and support change or when teeth shift slightly. The key is confirming whether the change is stable or progressing.
Can clenching or bite changes cause gaps
Force can influence how teeth wear and how contacts settle over time. If bite stability is changing, gaps can appear. We evaluate force and bite patterns as part of stability.
Does this mean I need orthodontics
Not automatically. Sometimes the priority is stabilizing inflammation and support first. Orthodontics may be part of the plan when the system is stable and the spacing problem is structural.
When should I call today
Call today if a gap is paired with looseness, sharp pain, swelling, drainage, or a rapidly worsening pattern.
Can a retainer help
A retainer can help hold teeth in position, but it should not be used to mask a progressing support problem. The exam confirms what is driving the change first.
§ 06 · Related guides
Related guides.
§·Clarity first · Then decisions
Not sure why a gap is forming?
Start with a calm evaluation. We explain what we see and what options protect long term stability. We do not recommend irreversible treatment based on symptoms alone.