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Can Benadryl Help A Toothache? | Relief Or Wrong Fix

No, diphenhydramine might make you sleepy, but it does not treat the dental problem causing tooth pain.

A toothache can make people try almost anything in the medicine cabinet. Benadryl is one of those “maybe this will help” choices because it can make you drowsy and it’s easy to find. That leads to a fair question: can it settle tooth pain long enough to get through the night?

Most of the time, no. Benadryl is an antihistamine. Toothaches usually come from a dental problem such as decay, a cracked tooth, gum irritation, an exposed root, or an infection. A pill that targets allergy symptoms does not fix those problems, and it does not work like a dental numbing medicine. You may feel calmer or sleepier after taking it, yet the aching tooth is still there.

Can Benadryl Help A Toothache? What It May Do

Benadryl may change how you feel around the pain more than it changes the pain itself. If a sore mouth is tied to an allergy issue, an itchy rash, or swelling from something other than the tooth, an antihistamine may help that piece of the problem. That is not the same as treating a toothache.

With a true toothache, the usual story is irritation inside the tooth or in the tissues around it. Pressure builds, the nerve gets angry, and heat, cold, sugar, or biting can set it off. Benadryl does not calm dental inflammation the way common pain relievers can. It also will not drain an abscess, seal a crack, clean out a cavity, or remove food wedged between teeth.

Why People Think It Helps

There are a few reasons this mix-up happens:

  • It can make you sleepy. If pain is keeping you up, drowsiness can feel like relief.
  • It may dull mouth irritation from non-dental causes. That can trick you into thinking the tooth itself is improving.
  • Some people confuse “less bothered” with “less pain.” Those are not always the same thing.

That difference matters. A toothache is often a signal that a tooth needs treatment, not just a pill.

Taking Benadryl For Tooth Pain: What Actually Changes

When someone takes Benadryl for a toothache, three things can happen. One, nothing changes. Two, they get sleepy and care less for a few hours. Three, side effects show up without any real gain. Dry mouth and grogginess are not much of a trade if the tooth is still throbbing.

That is why Benadryl is not a go-to pick for dental pain. The better question is not “Will this knock me out?” but “Does this match the kind of pain I have?” With tooth pain, the answer is usually no.

The American Dental Association’s acute dental pain guidance places non-opioid pain relievers, such as ibuprofen, naproxen, and acetaminophen, ahead of antihistamines for short-term dental pain care.

NHS toothache advice says to get dental care if pain lasts more than 2 days or comes with fever, pain when you bite, red gums, a bad taste in your mouth, or swelling in the cheek or jaw.

MedlinePlus drug information for diphenhydramine lists Benadryl as an antihistamine for allergy and cold symptoms and notes that it can cause drowsiness.

Option What It May Do What It Will Not Fix
Benadryl May make you sleepy; may help allergy-related itching or swelling Decay, cracked teeth, exposed nerve pain, dental infection
Ibuprofen May cut inflammation and pain for many dental aches The damaged tooth itself
Acetaminophen May lower pain, especially when ibuprofen is not an option The source of a cavity or abscess
Cold compress on the cheek May ease swelling and blunt pain for a while Deep tooth decay or infection inside the tooth
Warm salt-water rinse May soothe irritated gums and wash away debris Pulp damage inside the tooth
Flossing around the sore tooth May remove trapped food that is pressing on the gum A cavity, fracture, or abscess
Emergency dental visit Finds the cause and starts real treatment Nothing; this is the step that gets to the root of the pain

There is a pattern in that table: the options that help most with dental pain either reduce inflammation or remove irritation. Benadryl sits outside that group. It may change alertness, not the tooth. That is why people sometimes wake up after a nap and find the ache waiting for them.

What Usually Works Better While You Wait

If you cannot get to a dentist right away, the goal is to calm the area without making things worse. If you can take ibuprofen or acetaminophen safely, those medicines fit tooth pain better than Benadryl because they are built for pain. They still buy time; they do not replace dental work when the nerve, filling, or gum is the reason.

A few simple moves can help:

  • Rinse with warm salt water.
  • Floss gently around the sore tooth in case food is trapped.
  • Use an over-the-counter pain reliever only if the label says it is safe for you.
  • Put a cold compress on the outside of your cheek if the area feels swollen.
  • Skip ice directly on the tooth if cold triggers a sharp jolt.

One more thing: do not place aspirin on the gum or the aching tooth. That old trick can burn tissue and leave you with a sore spot on top of the toothache. Also skip random leftover antibiotics. Dental pain is treated by dealing with the tooth, and the wrong medicine can muddy the picture.

When Benadryl Makes Even Less Sense

Benadryl is a weak choice if the pain is pounding, wakes you from sleep, shoots into the jaw or ear, or gets worse with heat or biting. Those clues point toward a dental cause, not an allergy problem. In that setting, taking a sedating antihistamine can leave you foggy while the tooth keeps getting angrier.

It is also a poor workaround for kids unless a clinician has told you to use it. Benadryl can make some children sleepy, but others get wired and restless. Either way, it is still not treating the tooth.

Symptom What It Can Mean Best Next Step
Pain for more than 1–2 days Decay, cracked tooth, gum trouble, early infection Book a dental visit soon
Pain with swelling, fever, or bad taste Dental infection or abscess Same-day dental care
Trouble swallowing, speaking, or breathing Spreading infection and swelling Emergency care right away
Pain after a broken tooth or lost filling Exposed dentin or nerve Call a dentist
Sharp pain only with cold or sweets Sensitivity, worn enamel, cavity Dental exam soon

When A Toothache Needs Urgent Care

Not every toothache is an emergency, but some are. A swollen face, fever, foul taste, or pus near the gum can mean an infection is brewing. If swelling spreads toward the eye, neck, or floor of the mouth, treat that as urgent. If breathing, swallowing, or speaking gets hard, get emergency care right away.

A bad tooth can turn into a bigger problem faster than people expect. That is why short-term pain relief and real dental treatment need to work together. One buys time. The other fixes the cause.

What To Tell The Dentist

You can save time by being ready with a few details:

  • When the pain started
  • Whether it is sharp, throbbing, dull, or constant
  • What makes it worse: cold, heat, sweets, or biting
  • Any swelling, fever, bad taste, or drainage
  • What you already took, including Benadryl

That short list can point the dentist toward the cause fast. A cavity, cracked tooth, inflamed nerve, gum infection, and sinus pressure can all feel a bit different once you break the symptoms down.

What To Do Next

If you were hoping Benadryl might be a clever fix for a toothache, think of it as the wrong tool for the job. It may make you sleepy. It may help if your mouth problem is tied to an allergy issue. It does not treat the tooth itself, and it does not replace a dental visit.

If the pain is mild, use simple home steps and book a dentist. If the pain is growing, the face is swelling, or you have fever or trouble swallowing, get urgent care the same day. That is the point where guessing with Benadryl stops making sense.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.