How to Check Your Dog's Teeth at Home — Step-by-Step Vet Guide 2026 | PetVitalCare
📋 How-To Guide 👨‍⚕️ Vet Reviewed 🇺🇸 USA 🇪🇺 Europe

How to Check Your Dog's Teeth at Home

Over 80% of dogs have active dental disease by age three — and most show no obvious signs until the damage is already serious. A five-minute home check, done every one to two weeks, is enough to catch early tartar, gum inflammation, or a changed tooth colour before it requires expensive veterinary treatment. This guide shows you exactly what to look for, what healthy dog teeth and gums should look like, and how to build a daily routine — including how to use a dog dental water additive correctly — that keeps your dog's mouth healthy between professional cleanings.

👩
Sarah M. — Founder · PetVitalCare
📅 April 16, 2026 ⏱ 11 min read 👨‍⚕️ Reviewed by Dr. James R., DVM

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80%
of dogs over age 3 have active dental disease
AVDS / VCA Animal Hospitals 2026
5 min
is all it takes to do a complete home dental check
PDSA veterinary guidance
Stage 1
is the only stage of dental disease that is fully reversible
Merck Veterinary Manual 2026
$519+
average US treatment cost when disease is caught late
Zoetis Petcare data
🦷 Quick Answer — What Healthy vs. Unhealthy Looks Like
✅ Healthy Dog Teeth & Gums
  • ✅ Teeth: white to light cream / ivory
  • ✅ Gums: pale pink, smooth, firm, moist
  • ✅ Gum line: clean, no inflammation
  • ✅ Breath: mild meaty odour at close range
  • ✅ No loose, missing, or chipped teeth
  • ✅ Capillary refill: returns pink in <2 sec
⚠️ Warning Signs to Act On
  • ⚠️ Yellow or brown buildup at gum line
  • ⚠️ Red, swollen, or bleeding gums
  • ⚠️ Strong, persistent bad breath
  • ⚠️ Dark grey or black individual tooth
  • ⚠️ Loose teeth or visible root exposure
  • ⚠️ Facial swelling, especially below the eye
🔑 The most important thing: most dental disease in dogs is invisible until it is already serious. Regular home checks — even brief ones — change the outcome by catching changes early.

What Healthy Dog Teeth and Gums Actually Look Like

You cannot spot a problem unless you first know what normal looks like. Most dog owners have never had a vet sit down and show them exactly what a healthy dog's mouth should look like — which is why so many cases of dental disease are found late, during routine examinations when the owner had no idea anything was wrong.

Dog Teeth

According to the American Kennel Club and PDSA veterinary guidance, a healthy adult dog's mouth has the following characteristics:

What You Are Checking Healthy Appearance Status
Tooth colour White to light cream or ivory. Slight off-white in older dogs is normal. ✅ Normal
Gum colour Pale pink, sometimes with natural black pigmented patches (normal in certain breeds). ✅ Normal
Gum texture Firm, smooth, and moist. Not swollen, not bleeding, not receding away from tooth roots. ✅ Normal
Gum line Clean where gum meets tooth — no red line, no yellow or brown buildup at the junction. ✅ Normal
Capillary refill time Press gently on the gum with one clean finger, release, and observe. Colour should return to normal within 1–2 seconds. ✅ Normal
Breath Mild meaty or food-associated odour at very close range. Not detectable at normal conversational distance. ✅ Normal
Number of teeth Adult dogs have 42 permanent teeth (20 upper, 22 lower). All should be present and firmly seated. ✅ Normal
Surface of each tooth Smooth, intact enamel. No chips, cracks, or dark discolouration on individual teeth. ✅ Normal
📌 Breed Note — Black Gum Pigmentation Is Normal Many dogs — particularly Chow Chows, Shar-Peis, and some mixed breeds — have naturally black-pigmented gum tissue. This is entirely normal and not a sign of disease. The concern is when gum tissue that was previously pink becomes red, dark, or changes in appearance. Know what is normal for your specific dog and track changes over time.

Step-by-Step: How to Check Your Dog's Teeth at Home

This is the complete seven-step process. Done properly, it takes four to five minutes. The key is consistent timing — always check when your dog is calm — and consistent reward at the end, which builds your dog's tolerance for the routine over time.

⚠️ Before You Start — Safety First Never attempt a mouth examination when your dog is excited, immediately after feeding, or showing any signs of pain or anxiety. Even a gentle dog can bite reflexively if the examination causes unexpected pain from an existing oral problem. If at any point your dog appears distressed, stop immediately and consult your vet. Vets Now UK advises: examine your dog's mouth with care — never stick fingers inside if you are uncertain of their reaction.
Dog dental Check
  1. 1
    Choose the right moment — after a walk or rest
    A dog that has recently exercised and is in a calm, settled state is the best candidate for a mouth examination. Avoid post-meal times, play sessions, or any moment when your dog is aroused or anxious. Evening, after the last walk of the day, when your dog is ready to rest, is often the most reliable window for consistent cooperation.
    💡 Tip: Train puppies to accept this from week one. Old dogs can learn too — just expect a longer adjustment period.
  2. 2
    Create a positive association before you begin
    Show your dog a high-value treat — a small piece of chicken, a lick of enzymatic dog toothpaste (which they often enjoy as a flavour), or their favourite reward. Let them sniff your hand. Give the treat before you start. This signals "something good is happening" and activates cooperation rather than resistance.
    💡 Tip: For very resistant dogs, spend the first two weeks doing nothing but touching their lips and giving a treat. Build up to lifting the lip only once they are comfortable with touch.
  3. 3
    Examine the front teeth and canines
    With one hand, gently rest your palm on top of your dog's muzzle — this provides light, non-threatening restraint without squeezing. With two fingers of your other hand, carefully lift the upper lip. Examine the front incisor teeth (the small, even teeth across the very front) and the four canine teeth (the long pointed ones on each side). Look for tooth colour, check for chips or cracks, and observe the gum line where the tooth meets the gum.
  4. 4
    Slide back to examine the premolars and upper back teeth — this is the critical area
    Gently slide your fingers further toward the back of the mouth on one side, lifting the upper lip to expose the premolars and the upper fourth premolar — the large, multi-rooted carnassial tooth that is the most important tooth in your dog's mouth and the most commonly fractured. This is also where the salivary duct deposits minerals, meaning tartar accumulates here fastest. Look specifically at the outer surface of the upper back teeth against the cheek. Yellow or brown buildup here is the first visible sign in most dogs.
    💡 The Merck Veterinary Manual confirms: back teeth accumulate more disease than front teeth, and upper teeth more than lower. Always check this location specifically.
  5. 5
    Check gum colour and health along the entire gum line
    With the lip held up, look carefully along the gum line on both sides. Healthy gums are uniformly pale pink, smooth, and close-fitting against each tooth. Any red colouring — particularly a dark red line right at the point where the gum meets the tooth — indicates early gingivitis. Any recession (gum pulling back from the tooth to expose the root) indicates more advanced periodontal disease. Perform the capillary refill test: press gently on the gum, release, and count. Colour should return within two seconds.
  6. 6
    Check the lower jaw and bottom teeth
    Gently open your dog's mouth partially and look at the lower teeth, especially the large lower molars at the back. Check for tartar on the inner-facing surfaces of the lower back teeth, which the tongue usually keeps cleaner than the upper outer surfaces, but can still accumulate deposits. Also look at the inner surface of all teeth if your dog tolerates it — though the outer cheek-facing surfaces are your priority.
  7. 7
    Assess breath, reward immediately, and record your findings
    After releasing your dog's mouth, take a moment to assess breath odour at close range while they are still nearby. Give a treat immediately — this is the most important step for long-term tolerance. Then spend thirty seconds writing down anything unusual you noticed: location of discolouration, which teeth had buildup, gum redness on which side, breath quality. These notes will be invaluable at your next veterinary appointment and will help you track whether a condition is developing or stable.
    💡 Tip: Take a quick smartphone photo of visible tartar or gum redness. A photo shared with your vet before the appointment saves time and allows them to assess urgency.

What to Look For — Full Reference Guide

During your home check, you are looking for eight specific conditions. Each has a clear description, the stage of disease it indicates, and the correct response. Bookmark or screenshot this section for use during your checks.

Dental-Check
What You Find What It Means Stage Your Next Step
Light yellow coating on back teeth Early plaque hardening into tartar. Forming but not yet deeply embedded. ⚠️ Early Begin daily brushing immediately. Book vet cleaning within 3 months.
Brown or dark brown buildup at gum line Established tartar (calculus). Cannot be removed at home. Professional scaling needed. ⚠️ Moderate Book a veterinary dental cleaning within 4–6 weeks.
Thin red line at gum-tooth junction Early gingivitis. Bacterial inflammation at the gum line. Last reversible stage. ⚠️ Gingivitis Vet exam within 2–4 weeks. Daily brushing and VOHC products immediately.
Noticeably red, swollen, or bleeding gums Active gingivitis, possibly progressing to periodontitis. Significant bacterial load. 🔴 Advanced Vet exam this week. X-rays indicated. Professional cleaning required.
Gum recession — root exposure Periodontitis with irreversible bone and ligament loss. Likely significant pain. 🔴 Advanced Vet exam urgently. X-rays essential. Extraction likely for affected teeth.
Chipped or cracked tooth Tooth fracture. May expose pulp cavity — painful and infection risk. 🔴 Urgent Vet within 48 hours. X-ray to assess whether root canal or extraction needed.
Dark grey or black individual tooth Non-vital (dead) tooth. May be infected at the root. Often painful without obvious signs. 🔴 Urgent Vet this week. X-ray required. Dead teeth require treatment or extraction.
Swelling below the eye on one side Tooth root abscess — typically the upper carnassial tooth. Can be life-threatening if untreated. 🚨 Emergency Same-day veterinary care. This is a dental emergency.
⚠️ The Tartar Home-Removal Myth — Please Read This A common suggestion circulating on social media and some pet product websites is that "scraping" tartar off your dog's teeth at home with a human dental tool is safe and effective. It is not. Home scraping with hard instruments can crack tooth enamel, lacerate gum tissue, drive bacteria below the gum line, and cause your dog acute pain — all while leaving sub-gingival deposits completely untouched. The only safe way to remove established tartar is professional veterinary scaling under anaesthesia with proper equipment. Do not attempt it at home.

How Often Should You Check Your Dog's Teeth at Home?

The answer depends on your dog's age, breed, and existing oral health status. Here is the PDSA-informed framework that works for the majority of dogs in the USA and Europe.

  • Ideal frequency: every day during brushing. If you brush your dog's teeth daily — as recommended by every veterinary dental authority — you automatically perform a visual check at the same time. This is the gold standard.
  • Minimum: every 1–2 weeks. For dogs not yet on a daily brushing routine, the PDSA recommends a dedicated visual inspection at least once per week to twice per month. This frequency catches changes in tartar accumulation or gum colour while they are still early-stage.
  • ⚠️Small breeds: every week without exception. Toy and small breeds — Chihuahuas, Yorkshire Terriers, Shih Tzus, Maltese, Pomeranians — have the highest periodontal disease rates of any group due to crowded dentition in smaller jaws. Disease progresses faster in these breeds. Weekly checks are not optional for this group.
  • ⚠️Brachycephalic breeds: every week. French Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Pugs, Boston Terriers, and Boxers have abnormally positioned teeth due to their compressed skull anatomy. This creates additional plaque traps and faster disease progression. Weekly checks are the standard for these breeds.
  • ⚠️Senior dogs (7 years and over): weekly, plus biannual vet exams. Older dogs accumulate tartar faster because their saliva production decreases and their immune response to oral bacteria diminishes. Weekly home checks allow you to catch the faster progression typical in senior mouths.
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