Teething
When teeth come in, the signs that are real, and what safely soothes a teething baby.
Overview
When teeth come in, the signs that are real, and what safely soothes a teething baby. Baby teething guides: the typical timeline, real signs versus myths, and safe ways to soothe sore gums, with the products and remedies to avoid.
This topic sits inside our baby health & development silo. The first year is a year of firsts, and most of them come with a question: is this normal, is my baby on track, when do I worry. This is where we answer those, month by month and topic by topic. Development happens across a wide range, so we give you the typical picture without turning it into a test, and we are clear about the small set of signs that mean call your doctor today. Every health claim here cites the CDC, the AAP, or the NHS, and nothing here replaces your own pediatrician.
Why a dedicated teething hub: most parents arrive at this page from a search that has them midway through a decision, not at the start of one. The page is structured for that: a short overview, the questions other parents ask first, the sibling hubs inside baby health & development that touch on the same window, and a clear note on how we review the health content. Everything that follows is meant to be useful at 3am with a phone in one hand and a baby in the other.
If you have ten seconds, the table of contents above will jump you straight to the section you want. If you have a minute, read the FAQs below: they cover the questions that come up most when parents email us about teething. If you have longer, the related topics inside baby health & development extend the same map and the editorial footer at the bottom explains how this hub is reviewed and updated before it ships. We keep that footer on every page so the trust signal is the same wherever you land.
Who this hub is for: any parent who is reading about teething during the baby health & development window and wants a calm, plain-language overview rather than a wall of paid placements. The hub assumes nothing about your background, your provider, or your budget; it does assume you have a few minutes and a real situation in mind. If you are a clinician or an expert in this topic, you will probably skip past most of the body and head straight to the sources we cite from the FAQ answers; that is fine, the sources are deliberately one click away.
What this guide covers
Below is what most parents ask first about teething, with the same answers we give to readers who email us. These are the questions our editors track over time, and the answers reflect what clinicians and experienced parents actually tell us at the moment of writing. The set is short on purpose: if you are skimming this page in a hurry, the four or five questions below cover the ones that come up most. If something here does not match what your own provider has said about your specific situation, follow your provider; their context beats the most carefully edited general guidance every time.
When parents send these questions in, the version that gets a reply tends to include an actual situation: how old the baby is, what is in the room, what has already been tried. We have written the answers below with that mental model in mind, so they read less like a textbook and more like a sentence from a friend who has seen the same week.
Does teething cause a high fever?
No. Teething can bring a slightly raised temperature, lots of drool, and fussiness, but a true fever of 100.4F or 38C and higher is not from teething and should be checked, especially in a young baby.
What is not safe for soothing teething?
Skip amber teething necklaces, which are a strangulation and choking risk, and numbing gels with benzocaine, which the FDA warns against for babies. A clean chilled (not frozen) teether and gentle gum pressure are the safe go-tos.
How we cover this topic
This topic is tested by parents who use the products in real baby health & development weeks and edited against the linked sources. When a future version of this guide includes a clinical claim we cannot test ourselves, we will add a reviewer of record before publishing.
Our full standards are in the editorial policy: how we choose what to recommend, when we update, when we replace a pick, and what we never accept money for. If a guide on this hub ever feels off, the contact link at the bottom of every page reaches an editor who can fix it the same day. When we change an answer that was wrong, we say so plainly rather than rewriting it silently.
This hub currently has no affiliate links. When we add product picks here, the link mesh routes through our central redirect, is marked rel="sponsored nofollow", and the affiliate disclosure surfaces above the fold on the page so you can see it before you click. Nothing about that pattern is buried in the footer.
We refresh this hub on a quarterly cadence and any time the parent pillar or its reviewer of record changes. The last-reviewed date below the reviewer card reflects the most recent editorial pass over this specific page, not the parent pillar.
One last note on limits. The internet is not a substitute for the human who actually knows your situation; baby health & development questions in particular have answers that depend on you, your baby, your provider, and your context in ways no general guide can capture. We write this hub for the case where you want a second opinion, a sanity check, or a starting point for a question to bring to your provider. We do not write it as a replacement for one, and the editorial note below is not a substitute for the person who actually examines your baby.
More guides on this topic
- Teething or Ear Infection? How to Tell the Difference in a BabyTeething and ear infections look alike: fussiness, ear-pulling, poor sleep. Here is how to tell them apart, when a fever points to infection, and when to call your provider.
- How to Clean Baby Gums and When to Start Brushing TeethA simple, step-by-step guide to cleaning your baby's gums from the first days, when to start brushing teeth, and exactly how much fluoride toothpaste to use.
- Best Teething Toys for Babies, Tested by StageThe best teething toys for babies by stage, from soft silicone for early drool to textured molar chews. Safety-first picks, real brands, and what to skip.
- Are Amber Teething Necklaces Safe? What the FDA Says and Safer OptionsAmber teething necklaces carry real choking and strangulation risks, and the science behind them does not hold up. Here is what the FDA warns and what to use instead.
Teething: frequently asked questions
- Does teething cause a high fever?
- No. Teething can bring a slightly raised temperature, lots of drool, and fussiness, but a true fever of 100.4F or 38C and higher is not from teething and should be checked, especially in a young baby.
- What is not safe for soothing teething?
- Skip amber teething necklaces, which are a strangulation and choking risk, and numbing gels with benzocaine, which the FDA warns against for babies. A clean chilled (not frozen) teether and gentle gum pressure are the safe go-tos.
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