Wisdom Tooth Removal Recovery — Day by Day
What to expect, when to call, and how to make recovery as fast and comfortable as possible
Most patients facing wisdom tooth removal are more anxious about recovery than the procedure itself — and reasonably so, because the surgical day is comfortable under sedation but the days after require some active management. The good news: most patients return to non-strenuous activities within 3 to 5 days, and the worst is over by day 4. This post walks through recovery day by day so you know what is normal, what to watch for, and when to call. From Dr. Aqil Valika at Bliss Dental Center, St. Charles, IL.
Day of surgery. Bite firmly on the gauze pads provided for 30 to 45 minutes after the procedure. Some bleeding for the first 12 to 24 hours is normal — change gauze every 30 to 45 minutes if needed. Apply cold compress externally (15 minutes on, 15 off) to reduce swelling. Take prescribed pain medication or ibuprofen on schedule rather than waiting for pain. Stay home, sleep with your head elevated. Avoid: straws (suction can dislodge the blood clot), smoking, vigorous spitting, alcohol, and anything hot. Stick to cool soft foods only — yogurt, ice cream, smoothies (no straws), pudding, applesauce.
Days 1 to 3. Swelling typically peaks at day 2 to 3 and may extend down to your jawline or up toward your eye on the surgical side. This is normal. Bruising sometimes appears by day 2 to 3 — also normal. Pain is usually most intense on day 2; alternate ibuprofen and acetaminophen on schedule (your dentist provides specific instructions). Continue cold compress for the first 48 hours, then switch to warm compress on day 3 to help the swelling resolve. Diet: still soft foods, but you can progress from cool-only to lukewarm. Keep the surgical site clean with gentle warm salt-water rinses (half teaspoon salt in 8 oz warm water) starting 24 hours after surgery — gentle swishing, not vigorous.
Days 4 to 7. Swelling and pain start dropping noticeably. By day 5, most patients only need over-the-counter pain reliever, and many do not need anything. Diet progresses to soft chewable foods — scrambled eggs, oatmeal, soft pasta, well-cooked vegetables, mashed potatoes. Avoid hard, crunchy, sticky, spicy, or seedy foods until day 10 to 14 (seeds can lodge in the socket). You can typically return to non-strenuous work or school by day 4 to 5. Avoid heavy exercise (running, weight lifting) until at least day 7.
Days 7 to 14. Soft tissue is mostly healed. Most patients have stitches that dissolve on their own around day 7 to 10; non-dissolving stitches are removed at the 1-week follow-up visit. By day 10 to 14, most patients can resume normal diet (still avoiding very hard or crunchy foods directly on the surgical site). Light exercise resumes; full exercise typically by day 10 to 14. Bone fully heals (filling the empty socket with new bone) over 3 to 6 months — but you do not feel this stage; only diagnostic x-rays show the change.
When to call. Call us if: severe pain that suddenly worsens around day 3 to 5 (often dry socket — treatable with a medicated dressing); fever above 100.5; visible pus or foul taste persisting beyond day 3; bleeding that does not stop with pressure after 1 hour; numbness in the lip or tongue persisting beyond 24 hours. Call (630) 549-7916 for any of these. For more on wisdom tooth removal generally, see our wisdom tooth page. — Dr. Aqil Valika, Bliss Dental.
Have a Wisdom Tooth Question? Call Bliss Dental