— What this is
Broken or chipped tooth: what you need to know
Broken and chipped teeth are among the most common emergency presentations — usually the result of biting something hard (a popcorn kernel, a fish bone, a bottle cap), sport, or a fall. Severity varies enormously. A small enamel chip on the corner of a front tooth with no pain or sensitivity is essentially cosmetic and can wait days for a routine repair. A deeper fracture exposing the dentine (the yellower layer beneath the white enamel) creates immediate sensitivity to hot, cold, and sweet food. A break exposing the pulp — visible as a small red or pink spot in the centre of the broken surface — is acutely painful and risks rapid infection.
Cracked tooth syndrome deserves separate mention. Patients describe sharp pain on biting that vanishes the moment pressure releases — often without any visible crack. The crack lets bacteria reach the pulp and is one of the trickier diagnoses in dentistry. Matched dentists use a "tooth slooth" or similar device to apply pressure to individual cusps and identify which one is cracked. Treatment depends on how deep the crack runs: from a crown that holds the tooth together, to root canal therapy if the pulp is involved, to extraction in the worst cases.
Matched Harlow dentists triage by severity. Visible pulp exposure or significant pain books same day. Sensitivity without visible pulp exposure books within 48 hours. Cosmetic chips with no symptoms book at the next routine slot. Where you can recover the broken fragment, bring it — for larger front-tooth fractures, modern adhesive dentistry can sometimes re-attach the original piece for a virtually invisible repair.
— Why specialist matching matters
What good emergency care looks like for broken or chipped tooth
Triage by severity
Not every break is an emergency. The matched dentist tells you whether you need to be seen today or whether a routine slot in 48 hours is fine — saving you time and unnecessary urgency.
Original-fragment re-attachment where possible
For larger front-tooth fractures, the original piece can sometimes be bonded back. The cosmetic result is materially better than a composite rebuild. Bring the fragment in milk if you have it.
Cracked-tooth diagnosis
Pain on biting that disappears when pressure releases is the classic cracked-tooth presentation — and easy to miss without a deliberate test. Matched dentists routinely test for this.
Long-term plan, not just a quick fix
A composite repair on a heavily-restored tooth has a finite lifespan. The matched dentist discusses whether a crown is the right longer-term answer, with a clear cost comparison, rather than defaulting to the cheapest immediate fix.
— Common mistakes
Three mistakes that turn a manageable break into a bigger problem
1. Throwing away the broken fragment
For larger front-tooth fractures, modern adhesive dentistry can sometimes re-attach the original piece for an almost invisible repair. Store the fragment in milk and bring it to the appointment.
2. Eating on the broken side
A tooth with a deep fracture line will propagate the crack if loaded. What is a manageable break on Monday becomes an unrestorable tooth by Thursday. Use the other side until you are seen.
3. Assuming no pain means no urgency
A break that has exposed the dentine but not the pulp may not hurt initially — but bacteria are now inside the tooth structure and will reach the pulp within days. Asymptomatic breaks still need timely repair.
— Often connected to
Severe toothache
A break that exposes the inner pulp is acutely painful and follows the same treatment pathway as severe toothache from any other cause — pulp exposure, pain control, root canal or extraction.
Read about severe toothache— When this fits
Is matching for broken or chipped tooth right for you?
Same-day or next-day matching for a broken tooth is appropriate when:
- You can see pink, red, or visibly bloody tissue in the centre of the broken surface (pulp exposure)
- The tooth is sharply painful or aching constantly
- You have significant sensitivity to hot, cold, or sweet food and drink
- A larger fragment has come away — particularly from a front tooth where appearance matters
- You experience sharp pain on biting that disappears when pressure releases (suspected crack)
- A crown has cracked or chipped and is causing soft-tissue irritation
— The matching process
How broken or chipped tooth matching works
Recover the fragment if you can
Find any larger broken pieces and store them in milk or saline. Even if the dentist cannot re-attach, having the fragment helps with reconstruction planning.
Submit the matching form
Describe the break — front or back tooth, size of fragment, any visible bleeding or pulp tissue, current pain level. We use this to triage urgency.
Emergency assessment
The matched dentist examines, takes X-rays, and assesses both the immediate damage and any underlying weakness. They explain whether you need same-day treatment or whether a planned routine repair is appropriate.
Restoration: rebuild or refer
Most broken teeth can be restored at the visit — composite for chips, crowns where structure is compromised. Severe fractures may need root canal therapy followed by a crown, usually as separate appointments.
This is a dental matching service, not a medical service
For genuine medical emergencies — uncontrolled bleeding, facial swelling spreading to your eye, throat or neck, difficulty breathing or swallowing, or feeling severely unwell — these are hospital problems and need IV antibiotics, not a dental appointment.