Yes, a tooth infection can raise body temperature when germs and inflammation spread beyond the tooth into nearby tissue or the bloodstream.
Some tooth pain stays local. Fever changes the picture. When you feel warm, achy, or chilled along with a sore tooth, your body may be reacting to an infection that is not staying contained.
You’ll learn how tooth infections lead to fever, what symptom patterns matter most, what usually happens at the dentist, and what you can do at home while you line up care.
Why A Tooth Infection Can Trigger Fever
Fever is a body response. It starts when immune signals reset your temperature “set point.” With a tooth infection, the trigger is often an abscess, a pocket of pus caused by bacteria.
An abscess can form at the tip of a tooth root after deep decay, injury, or failed dental work. It can also form in gum tissue beside a tooth. As pressure builds, tissue swells and the immune system ramps up. If germs and swelling stay confined, your temperature may stay normal. If they spread into the jaw, face, or neck spaces, fever is more likely.
The NHS lists “a high temperature” as a sign of a dental abscess and notes that an abscess needs urgent dental treatment. NHS guidance on dental abscess symptoms also points out that dental abscesses do not clear on their own.
Mayo Clinic describes tooth abscesses as infections linked to decay, injury, or prior dental work, with swelling and irritation around the root tip. Mayo Clinic’s tooth abscess overview is a useful reference for how these infections start and why they can worsen.
Can A Tooth Infection Cause A Fever? What Fever Tells You
When fever shows up with tooth pain, it usually fits one of these situations:
- Local infection with a mild body response. You feel slightly warm and tired. Pain stays near one tooth.
- Spreading infection in the face or jaw. Swelling grows, chewing hurts, and fever can climb.
- System-wide illness. You feel weak, shaky, confused, or short of breath. This is a medical emergency.
The number on the thermometer matters less than the trend and the full pattern: swelling size, how fast symptoms rose, and whether you can swallow and breathe normally.
Signs That Lean Toward Infection
Not every toothache is infection. Cracks, grinding, and sinus pressure can hurt without pus. These clues more often point to infection.
Local Mouth Clues
- Throbbing pain that pulses or wakes you up
- Gum swelling near one tooth, sometimes like a pimple
- Bad taste or foul smell that comes and goes
- Pain when you bite down
- Hot and cold sensitivity that lingers
Body Clues
- Chills or shivering
- Muscle aches
- Headache paired with jaw or tooth pain
- Swollen, tender lymph nodes under the jaw or in the neck
If you have a thermometer, take a few readings across the day so you see direction. Still, do not wait for a “high enough” number if you feel worse by the hour.
Red Flags That Need Urgent Care Today
Some patterns suggest the infection is spreading into spaces where it can turn dangerous fast. Seek urgent medical care if any of these show up:
- Swelling that spreads toward the eye, under the jaw, or down the neck
- Trouble breathing, swallowing, or handling saliva
- Muffled voice, drooling, or a “hot potato” voice
- Trismus (you can’t open your mouth more than two finger widths)
- Fainting, confusion, or severe weakness
- Fast heart rate with fever and chills
If breathing or swallowing feels off, do not wait for a dental appointment. Get medical assessment right away.
What Dentists Check When Fever Meets Tooth Pain
At a dental visit, the goal is to find the source and drain or remove the infection. Expect questions about timing, swelling, fever, and pain triggers.
The exam often includes checking the gums for a draining point, tapping the tooth, testing the bite, and looking for decay or cracks. X-rays can show changes near the root tip and bone, though early infection can still hide on imaging.
Treatment choices often include drainage, root canal treatment, or extraction. The main aim is to remove the source, not just dull the pain.
Table Of Fever-Linked Tooth Infection Clues
This table maps common symptom combos to what they often suggest and the next step that fits many situations.
| What You Notice | What It Often Points To | What To Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| Tooth pain, mild warmth, no swelling | Early pulp irritation or small local infection | Book a dental visit soon; use the home steps below |
| Throbbing pain, gum pimple, bad taste | Draining abscess near the tooth | See a dentist promptly; drainage or root canal is often needed |
| Fever with facial swelling near the cheek | Spreading infection in the upper jaw area | Same-day dental care or urgent care, based on swelling speed |
| Fever with swelling under the jaw | Lower jaw infection that can spread into neck spaces | Urgent medical assessment |
| Fever, chills, swollen neck nodes | Body-wide response to infection | Seek care soon; do not wait days |
| Fever plus trouble swallowing or drooling | Deep space infection affecting throat function | Emergency care now |
| Fever plus confusion or fainting | Possible systemic infection response | Emergency care now |
| Fever after dental work with rising swelling | Post-procedure infection or flare | Contact the treating clinic right away; go urgent if worsening |
What Treatment Usually Looks Like
A tooth infection is treated by removing the source. That can mean draining pus, cleaning the root canal space, or pulling the tooth. The choice depends on the tooth, how damaged it is, and how far infection has spread.
Drainage, Root Canal, Or Extraction
If there is a visible abscess, the dentist may make a small opening to drain it. That can drop pressure and pain quickly. If infection started inside the tooth, a root canal removes infected pulp and seals the tooth. If the tooth can’t be saved, extraction removes the place where bacteria keep growing.
Where Antibiotics Fit
Antibiotics can help in certain cases, yet they do not replace dental treatment. The CDC shares a PDF summarizing American Dental Association guidance: for many immunocompetent adults with dental pain and localized swelling, antibiotics are often not needed if definitive dental care is available. CDC/ADA guidance on dental pain and swelling explains this approach and stresses definitive dental treatment.
Antibiotics are more likely when there are systemic signs like fever, when swelling is spreading, or when dental care is not immediately available. Your clinician decides based on your symptoms and exam.
Pain Control While You Wait
Over-the-counter pain medicine can help you eat and sleep until treatment. Follow the label. Avoid doubling up by mixing products that share ingredients. If you have conditions like ulcers, kidney disease, liver disease, pregnancy, or you take blood thinners, ask a clinician before taking common pain relievers.
Safe Home Steps While You Arrange Care
Home care can ease discomfort, yet it cannot cure an abscess. Use these steps as a bridge to care.
- Warm salt-water rinses. Swish gently several times a day.
- Cold pack on the face. Ten minutes on, ten minutes off can reduce swelling.
- Soft foods. Soups, eggs, yogurt, and smoothies keep chewing light.
- Sleep with your head raised. A second pillow can reduce night throbbing.
- Gentle brushing and flossing. Keep plaque down without scraping sore gum tissue.
Avoid placing aspirin on the gums. It can burn tissue. Avoid heat on the face if swelling is active.
Table Of Common Dental Steps And What They Do
These are common ways dental teams stop a tooth infection and track healing.
| Dental Step | What It Targets | What You May Notice After |
|---|---|---|
| Incision and drainage | Releases pus and pressure | Pain relief within hours; swelling can drop over 1–2 days |
| Root canal treatment | Removes infected pulp inside the tooth | Tender bite for a few days; fever often eases as source clears |
| Extraction | Removes a tooth that can’t be saved | Soreness at the socket; swelling usually eases as healing starts |
| Antibiotics (when indicated) | Helps slow spread in tissue and blood | Fever can drop in 24–48 hours; finish the course as directed |
| Final restoration | Seals cracks and weak spots | Less sensitivity; bite can feel different until adjusted |
| Follow-up check | Confirms healing and catches relapse | Next steps if pain or swelling returns |
How Fast Fever Should Improve After Treatment
Once the source is drained or removed, body symptoms often improve over the next day or two. Pain can linger as tissue heals, yet fever should trend down. If fever climbs, swelling spreads, or you feel weaker, seek care right away.
Reducing The Odds Of Another Infection
Most tooth infections start with decay, cracks, or gum disease. Small daily habits lower the chance that bacteria reach the pulp.
- Brush twice a day with fluoride toothpaste.
- Clean between teeth daily with floss or interdental brushes.
- Limit frequent sugary drinks and snacks.
- Use a mouthguard if you grind your teeth at night.
- Keep regular dental checkups so small cavities get treated early.
The ADA’s patient site lists common abscess treatments like drainage and root canal therapy, plus hygiene steps that reduce risk. MouthHealthy (ADA) information on abscesses is a reliable source for prevention basics.
When You Can’t Get A Same-Day Dental Appointment
If fever and tooth pain hit at night or on a weekend, pick the safest option available in your area. Emergency dental clinics can treat many cases. If you see red flags like trouble breathing, swallowing, or fast-growing swelling, go for emergency medical care.
If your symptoms feel steady and mild, book the earliest dental slot you can and use the home steps above. If you start to feel worse, switch plans and get seen sooner.
References & Sources
- NHS.“Dental abscess.”Lists symptoms such as high temperature and urges urgent dental care for suspected abscess.
- Mayo Clinic.“Tooth abscess: Symptoms & causes.”Explains how tooth abscesses form and why infection can worsen without treatment.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Treating Patients with Dental Pain and Swelling.”Summarizes ADA guidance on when antibiotics may not be needed if definitive dental care is available.
- American Dental Association (MouthHealthy).“Abscess.”Describes common abscess treatments and hygiene steps that reduce recurrence risk.
