Opening July 2026.
You take a bite of your morning toast or sip a cold drink, and suddenly a sharp pain shoots through one of your teeth. Tooth pain when biting down is one of the most common reasons patients in Brookshire and Fulshear, TX call our office. The good news? Most causes are highly treatable, especially when caught early.
In this guide, we’ll walk through the most common reasons your tooth hurts when you bite down, which symptoms mean you should call a dentist right away, and what to expect during diagnosis and treatment.
Pain when biting almost always points to one of two things: a structural problem with the tooth itself (a cavity, crack, or damaged filling), or pressure-related inflammation around the tooth (an abscess, grinding, or a recent dental procedure). Identifying the cause early is critical. What starts as a simple cavity can progress to needing a root canal or extraction if left untreated.
A cracked tooth is the most common cause of biting pain, especially in adults. Cracks can be hairline-thin and invisible to the naked eye and often don’t show up on standard X-rays. The classic sign is sharp pain when you release your bite (not while pressing down). Without treatment, cracks tend to spread deeper and may eventually reach the root.
Watch for: sharp pain on release, sensitivity to temperature, intermittent pain with no visible cavity, pain when chewing certain foods.
When a cavity reaches the inner layer of your tooth (the dentin), biting pressure can cause sharp or throbbing pain. You may also notice the pain when food gets lodged in a specific spot, or when eating something sweet or cold.
Watch for: a visible dark spot or hole in the tooth, sensitivity to sweets, food consistently getting stuck in one place.
Older dental work doesn’t last forever. A filling that has cracked or come loose — or a crown that’s lost its seal — can let bacteria seep underneath, causing decay and pain. You may feel discomfort when chewing in that spot or a rough edge with your tongue.
An abscess is a bacterial infection at the root of a tooth, typically caused by untreated decay or a deep crack. It produces deep, throbbing pain that worsens with pressure. An abscess is a dental emergency and needs prompt care — in rare cases, the infection can spread beyond the mouth.
Watch for: constant throbbing pain, gum or facial swelling, bad taste, fever, or a tooth that feels ‘taller’ than the others.
Many people grind or clench their teeth at night without realizing it. Over time, this strains the ligaments around tooth roots and creates a generalized soreness when biting. It is usually worse in the morning.
Watch for: morning jaw soreness, frequent headaches, worn-down teeth, sensitivity in several teeth at once.
If your tooth started hurting right after a dental procedure, the new filling or crown may simply sit a fraction of a millimeter too high, which makes it the first point of contact when you bite. This is one of the easiest fixes: your dentist adjusts the bite in just a few minutes.
Your upper back teeth share nerve pathways with your sinuses. During allergy season or a sinus infection, that pressure can mimic tooth pain when you bite. If you also have congestion, facial pressure, or recent cold symptoms, sinus issues may be the culprit.
Dental issues rarely heal on their own. Catching a problem early is the difference between a 20-minute filling and a multi-visit root canal.
Diagnosing biting pain often takes a combination of tests, since cracks and deep cavities don’t always show on X-rays. At your appointment in our Brookshire office, expect some combination of:
Treatment depends entirely on what’s causing the pain:
These steps offer temporary relief — they don’t fix the underlying problem. Schedule a dental visit even if the pain eases up.
Tooth pain when biting down is your body’s way of asking for help. At MK Dental Studio, we provide same-day emergency appointments and comprehensive dental evaluations for patients across Brookshire, Fulshear, Katy, and the surrounding Texas communities. Our team will pinpoint exactly what’s causing your discomfort and treat it before it becomes a bigger problem.