Home
 
 
   
Does tea stain teeth?



Question:

Any ideas on which promotes more (or less?) tooth enamel stain?

Black Tea? Green Tea? Coffee?


Answer:

My dentist, at least, says that black tea stains teeth fairly quickly, but that it is also one of the easiest stains to remove. Larger particles or some such explanation.

Definitely. I recently gave up a 20-year coffee habit and started drinking black tea every morning. After 3 weeks my once-brilliant-white teeth were ugly yellow. I started brushing with baking soda & peroxide (one of my twice-daily brushings) and it seems to be reversing things well.

Black tea most certainly does stain teeth, but it doesn't stain the teeth- it stains the plaque adhered to the teeth. I taste tea all day, for a living as well as at home, and have never had a problem unless my oral hygiene drops. Tea is a good source of fluoride, which helps prevent tooth decay, to boot. So basically, be vigilant about keeping those tooths brushed and flossed, and see a dentist regularly. If your teeth are stained, while unsightly, i don't believe this is doing long term harm. It might actually be good, warning you in a much less offensive way than those awful red dye tablets the dentist might use to visualise plaque.

Of course, I'm not a mouth care professional, so if you're worried, see your dentist/hygenist.

As for green tea, the plaque is probably stained, but since the major green tea compounds are only visible in the ultraviolet, you're probably not going to see them :)

Herbal tea is anyone's guess.

I don't know that any of them really stain the enamel that much as I drink several pot's a day and have not noticed any change in colour. More importantly, my wife who is a dental hygiene 'enthusiast' , has not noticed anything, and believe me she would mention it !

I can tell you that tea does contain quite some quantities of flouride and has been found to be effective in the retardation of tooth decay and cavities(caries). Poorer quality leaf tends to be better for flouride content than the two leafs and a bud.


Rate green tea stain teeth

Not Rated stars Ave. rating: Not Rated from 0 votes.





 
Privacy Policy