Many parents start thinking about braces when their child enters the tooth-shedding stage. The adult teeth may look crooked, the front teeth may seem too large, there may be wide gaps, or the upper and lower teeth may not bite together properly. Parents often ask: what age can kids get braces, should we wait until all baby teeth fall out, or is age 7 too early for an orthodontic check-up?
The safer way to understand this topic is to separate two ideas: the age for an orthodontic assessment and the age to actually start braces. A check-up around age 7 does not mean every child needs braces immediately. It simply allows a dentist or orthodontist to assess the child’s teeth, bite and jaw development, then decide whether the child should be monitored, reviewed later, or considered for early guidance if needed.
There is no single age that fits every child. Some children may need an early orthodontic assessment during the mixed dentition stage, when both baby teeth and permanent teeth are present. Others may not need treatment until more permanent teeth have erupted. Some may not need braces at all.
Whether a child needs braces depends on several factors, including tooth crowding, jaw growth, bite relationship, oral habits, tooth eruption pattern, remaining baby teeth and the child’s ability to keep teeth clean.
For parents, the most practical way to think about this is: assessment first, not immediate treatment.
Around age 7, many children already have a mix of baby teeth and permanent teeth. This gives a dentist or orthodontist useful information about how the teeth and jaws are developing.
At this age, an orthodontic professional may be able to notice issues that are not obvious to parents, such as crowding, crossbite, underbite, open bite, deep bite, jaw growth imbalance, missing teeth, extra teeth, or permanent teeth erupting in the wrong direction.
Many parents worry that once they bring a child for an orthodontic check-up, the child will automatically be told to start braces. In reality, the outcome of an early assessment may vary.
| Possible Assessment Result | What It May Mean |
|---|---|
| Development looks normal | The dentist or orthodontist may recommend monitoring and routine dental checks. |
| Mild crowding or temporary irregularity | The child may not need immediate treatment and may only need follow-up as more permanent teeth erupt. |
| Clear bite or jaw growth concern | Further assessment may be suggested to understand whether early guidance is useful. |
| Permanent teeth erupting in unusual positions | An X-ray or more detailed evaluation may be needed to understand tooth position. |
| Too early to decide | The child may be advised to wait until more permanent teeth come in before deciding on braces. |
Many children and teenagers start active orthodontic treatment during the later mixed dentition or early permanent dentition stage. This often falls somewhere between 8 and 14 years old, when more adult teeth have erupted and the child’s jaw is still developing.
However, this does not mean every child should start braces within that age range. Some children need earlier guidance, some start later, and some do not require treatment. Timing should be based on professional assessment, not only age.
Parents do not need to diagnose orthodontic problems at home. However, if you notice the following signs, it may be reasonable to arrange an orthodontic or dental assessment.
Not always. During the tooth-shedding stage, newly erupted adult teeth may look large, uneven, spaced or slightly crooked. Some mild irregularity may improve as the jaw grows and more permanent teeth come in.
However, if the teeth are severely crowded, a permanent tooth is erupting in a clearly abnormal position, the bite is not working properly, or the child cannot clean the teeth well, it is safer to ask a dentist or orthodontist.
Braces are not the only possible outcome. The professional may advise observation, periodic review, removal of a retained baby tooth, space evaluation, oral habit correction, or treatment later when the timing is more suitable.
Yes. A child can be assessed even while some baby teeth are still present. In fact, some early orthodontic or interceptive treatment is done during the mixed dentition stage.
Early treatment may be considered for specific developing problems, such as crossbite, jaw growth imbalance, severe space shortage, or permanent teeth erupting in problematic positions. But many children do not need early treatment and may simply be monitored.
The first orthodontic check-up is usually an assessment, not a major treatment appointment. The exact process depends on the clinic, but it may include checking the child’s teeth, bite, jaw growth and tooth eruption pattern.
| Assessment Area | What May Be Checked |
|---|---|
| Tooth alignment | Whether permanent teeth are crowded, rotated, spaced or erupting in unusual positions. |
| Bite relationship | Whether there is crossbite, underbite, deep bite, open bite, protrusion or other bite concerns. |
| Tooth-shedding progress | Whether baby teeth are falling out at an expected pace and permanent teeth are erupting properly. |
| Jaw growth | Whether the upper and lower jaws appear to be developing in a balanced way. |
| Oral habits | Whether thumb sucking, mouth breathing, tongue thrusting or lip biting may be affecting dental development. |
| Need for X-ray | If needed, an X-ray may help check permanent tooth position, missing teeth, extra teeth or impacted teeth. |
It is normal to feel worried when a child’s adult teeth look crooked. But parents should avoid rushing into decisions without a proper assessment.
The following situations are not always braces problems, but they should be assessed rather than ignored.
| Situation | Why It Should Be Checked |
|---|---|
| Lower front teeth bite in front of upper front teeth | This may suggest a crossbite or bite development issue. |
| Adult tooth erupts while baby tooth is not loose | A dentist can assess whether the baby tooth is blocking the permanent tooth’s path. |
| Severe crowding makes brushing difficult | Crowded teeth may trap food and increase cleaning difficulty. |
| Long-term mouth breathing or lips cannot close comfortably | This may be related to oral habits, airway, bite or jaw development and may need assessment. |
| Tooth position changed after injury | Dental trauma should be assessed to understand possible effects on baby teeth, permanent teeth or roots. |
| Bite affects eating, chewing or speech | Functional concerns should not be treated as cosmetic issues only. |
Tooth alignment and oral hygiene are closely related. When teeth are crowded, food can get trapped more easily, and brushing between teeth may become harder. Even if a child does not need braces immediately, parents should still pay attention to brushing habits, fluoride toothpaste use, sweet snack frequency and dental check-ups.
If your child is in the tooth-shedding stage, it may also help to understand baby tooth loss order, permanent tooth eruption, 6-year molars and how to clean newly erupted adult teeth.
HiParents is gradually organising child dental care and family dental information to help parents understand tooth-shedding, child cavity prevention, braces assessment, dental check-ups and basic dental clinic contact information. The content is for general reference and parent education only and does not replace advice from a qualified dentist or orthodontist.
There is no fixed age for every child. Some children may need early orthodontic assessment during the tooth-shedding stage, while others may only need treatment later when more permanent teeth have erupted. Timing depends on tooth development, bite, jaw growth and professional assessment.
No. Around age 7 is commonly recommended for an orthodontic check-up because children usually have a mix of baby teeth and permanent teeth. However, a check-up does not mean the child must start braces immediately.
Not always. Adult teeth may look slightly uneven when they first erupt. Whether braces are needed should be decided by a dentist or orthodontist after examination.
Yes. A child can have an orthodontic assessment while some baby teeth are still present. Some early orthodontic care is done during the mixed dentition stage, but not every child needs early treatment.
Some 8-year-old children may be suitable for early orthodontic guidance or phase-one treatment, but many are not. The decision should be based on the child’s teeth, bite and jaw development.
Not always. A dentist or orthodontist may recommend X-rays only when needed to assess permanent tooth position, missing teeth, extra teeth or impacted teeth.
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