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Treatment guide

Dental Cleaning

A professional cleaning removes the hardened plaque (tartar) your toothbrush can’t — it is the single best-value treatment in dentistry.

What is a professional cleaning?

Even with perfect brushing, plaque hardens into tartar (calculus) in places you can’t reach. Tartar irritates the gums, causing bleeding, bad breath and — over years — gum disease and bone loss, the main reason adults lose teeth.

A professional cleaning removes tartar and surface stains, leaving teeth smooth and gums healthy. For most people, once or twice a year is ideal.

Make the right choice: your options

“Cleaning” covers several levels of treatment. What you need depends on how much tartar has built up and whether gum disease has started.

OptionBest forWhat it involvesDiscomfortTimeRelative cost
Deep cleaning (scaling & root planing)Early–moderate gum diseaseCleaning below the gum line, often with local anesthetic, usually in 2 visitsMild; numbed2 × 45–60 min$$
Airflow / stain removalCoffee, tea, tobacco stainsFine powder jet polishes away surface stainsMinimal+10–20 min$
Periodontal maintenanceAfter treated gum diseaseRegular deep maintenance every 3–4 monthsMinimal45–60 min$$

Costs are relative and vary a lot by country and clinic. Durability figures are typical ranges — good home care makes the biggest difference.

How the treatment works

  1. Examination
    The dentist or hygienist checks your gums, often measuring pocket depths around each tooth.
  2. Ultrasonic scaling
    A vibrating tip with water spray breaks tartar off the teeth — this is the tickly, squirty part.
  3. Hand scaling
    Fine hand instruments remove the last deposits in tight spots.
  4. Polishing
    A rotating cup with paste (or an airflow jet) removes stains and smooths the surfaces.
  5. Advice
    You get honest, personal advice on brushing technique and cleaning between teeth.

Aftercare

  • Gums may bleed slightly and feel tender for a day or two — that’s normal and improves fast.
  • Teeth can feel temporarily sensitive to cold where tartar was removed.
  • If a lot of tartar was removed, teeth may feel “gappy” — that’s the space the tartar was filling.
  • Keep the result: brush twice daily, clean between teeth daily.
  • Book your next cleaning before you leave — 6 or 12 months depending on your gums.

Frequently asked questions

Does a cleaning damage the enamel?

No. Scaling removes deposits sitting on top of the enamel — it does not remove tooth substance. The “scraping” feeling is tartar coming off, not tooth.

Why do my gums bleed when I brush?

Bleeding gums are almost always inflamed gums — an early, reversible stage of gum disease. A cleaning plus good home care usually stops the bleeding within two weeks.

How often do I really need a cleaning?

Once a year is a good baseline; twice a year if you build tartar quickly, smoke, or have had gum problems. Your dentist will tell you honestly what your gums need.

Will a cleaning make my teeth whiter?

It removes surface stains, so teeth often look noticeably brighter — but it does not change the natural color of the teeth. For that, see our whitening guide.

Get this treatment for free

We collaborate with models and content creators: you record honest videos about your treatment experience, and we cover the dental work.

This guide is general information, not personal medical advice. Every mouth is different — always discuss your situation with a dentist before deciding on treatment.