Product Education§

Choosing a soft-bristle brush — what to look for.

The single most under-respected oral care purchase. Five things that separate a daily-driver brush from a tool that recedes your gums.

By Wytte Editorial13 February 20262 minute readCategory · Product Education
A soft-bristle toothbrush resting on a clean edgePhoto: Castorly Stock / Pexels

Most adults use the wrong brush for years before noticing. By the time they do — recession, sensitivity, abraded enamel — the bristles have already done their work.

What "soft" actually means

The American Dental Association classifies bristles by tip diameter:

  • Extra soft: 0.10 mm
  • Soft: 0.15 mm
  • Medium: 0.18 mm
  • Hard: 0.22 mm

In Indian and EU markets, "soft" sometimes means 0.18 mm — closer to American medium. Read the gauge, not the label. Look for 0.12–0.15 mm if the brand publishes the number; assume bigger if they don't.

Five things that matter

  1. Bristle gauge. 0.12–0.15 mm tips for adults. Lower for known sensitivity.
  2. End-rounded tips. Cheaper brushes have cut-square ends that abrade gums; quality brushes round the tips during manufacture. Hold it to the light — the tips should reflect like small spheres.
  3. Head size. Smaller is better. A 22–25 mm head reaches back molars and the lingual side of front teeth. The big-head brushes Americans favour are designed for speed, not coverage.
  4. Tufting. Multi-level tufts (taller in the middle) reach gumline contours better than flat-cut. Diamond or wave patterns are mostly marketing.
  5. Handle weight and grip. Light, balanced, slightly textured grip. A heavy handle encourages pressure. A skinny handle encourages a clenched fist.

Manual vs electric

Both clean equivalently well when used correctly. The difference: electric brushes are more forgiving of bad technique. Sonic and oscillating brushes deliver gentle micro-movements that compensate for the heavy hand most adults brush with.

  • Choose electric if you press too hard or rush.
  • Choose manual if you brush consciously and want zero plastic / no batteries.
  • Avoid hybrid "rotating + scrub" cheap electrics — abrasive.

When to replace

Every 3 months, or sooner if the bristles splay outward. A splayed brush isn't reaching the gumline anymore; it's polishing the front faces only. Replace toothbrush heads at the start of each season — small habit, big payoff.

During a whitening course

Use the same brush, just lighter. Skip electric brushes the day of a strip session if you have any sensitivity — the vibration triggers it. Otherwise no change.

The pressure test

Hold the brush like a pen, not a hammer. If the bristles bend visibly while you brush, you're pressing too hard. The bristles do the work; the wrist is just for direction.

Soft. Small head. Light hand.

More: the two-minute ritual.

Disclaimer. Editorial, not medical advice. For brush recommendations specific to gum disease or orthodontics, consult your dentist.

Disclaimer. Editorial only — not medical advice. The Wytte Journal writes for general education and brand context. If you have ongoing oral health concerns, fillings, gum recession, recent dental work, are pregnant, or are under 18, consult a registered dental professional. Wytte is not a substitute for a dental check-up.
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