Gum recession, quietly — the symptom most adults miss.
Gums don't grow back. The slow retreat is mostly preventable, mostly self-inflicted, and mostly invisible until it isn't.
Photo: SHVETS production / PexelsAdults rarely notice gums receding until a tooth looks "longer." By then, several millimetres are already gone — and gum tissue, unlike enamel, doesn't grow back.
What recession actually is
Gum tissue retreats from the tooth crown toward the root. The visible result: a longer-looking tooth, a darker line at the gumline, exposed root surface (which is softer than enamel and stains/decays faster), and often sensitivity to cold.
The three real causes
- Brushing too hard with a medium or hard brush. Mechanical abrasion. Single biggest cause in healthy mouths.
- Periodontal disease. Inflammation around the tooth roots; the gum migrates away as the body fights bacteria. Symptoms: bleeding gums, bad breath, looseness.
- Bruxism. Night grinding stresses the gum margin. The clinical sign is abfraction — a small notch at the gumline.
Genetics contribute (some people inherit thin gum biotype) but rarely cause the problem alone.
What you'll notice before it's obvious
- Teeth slightly more sensitive to cold than a year ago
- A small dark "shadow" at the gumline of certain teeth
- Floss catching unusually low between teeth
- A subtle "long-toothed" look in side-by-side photos a year apart
What's reversible
- Mild inflammation from gingivitis: yes, with cleaning + technique change
- Mechanical recession: no — the tissue doesn't return on its own
- Severe periodontal loss: only with surgical grafts
What slows it (and helps the existing situation)
- Switch to a soft-bristle brush if you haven't.
- Hold the brush like a pen, not a fist.
- Use a 45° angle to the gumline with light pressure; let the bristles do the work.
- Replace the brush every 3 months.
- Floss daily — recession often starts interdentally and is invisible from the front.
- Sleep on your back or with a night guard if you grind.
- Get a dental cleaning every 6 months; sooner if you've ever had bleeding gums.
The brush you use today is the gumline you'll have in five years.
Whitening interaction
Exposed root surfaces are softer and more sensitive to peroxide than enamel. If you already have visible recession, a standard at-home strip course can hit harder than expected — extend the sensitivity preload to two weeks before starting, or talk to a dentist first.
Bleeding when you floss the same spot for 3+ weeks. A tooth that feels slightly loose. Persistent bad breath after brushing. Any of these — book a consult. Recession that's caught at gingivitis stage is much more recoverable than periodontitis.
Gums don't grow back. Don't push them.
Disclaimer. Editorial, not medical advice. Recession is best assessed by a dental professional.