When in the dental chair at your dentists office you may have noticed that the doctor, when making references to your teeth, does not call them by name but by number. To help you better understand which tooth is being referred to during your visit this chart may be handy to print out and take with you. You can have the Doctor circle the tooth or teeth that he is checking or working on. The chart is pictured is as if you're facing your dentist and he/she has their mouth wide open.
6 to 7 years
Primary Teeth Development Chart
Upper Teeth
When tooth emerges
When tooth falls out
Central incisor
8 to 12 months
6 to 7 years
Lateral incisor
9 to 13 months
7 to 8 years
Canine (cuspid)
16 to 22 months
10 to 12 years
First molar
13 to 19 months
9 to 11 years
Second molar
25 to 33 months
10 to 12 years
Lower Teeth
Second molar
23 to 31 months
10 to 12 years
First molar
14 to 18 months
9 to 11 years
Canine (cuspid)
17 to 23 months
9 to 12 years
Lateral incisor
10 to 16 months
7 to 8 years
Central incisor
6 to 10 months
As seen from the chart, the first teeth begin to break through the gums at about 6 months of age. Usually, the first two teeth to erupt are the two bottom central incisors (the two bottom front teeth). Next, the top four front teeth emerge. After that, other teeth slowly begin to fill in, usually in pairs - one each side of the upper or lower jaw - until all 20 teeth (10 in the upper jaw and 10 in the lower jaw) have come in by the time the child is 2 ½ to 3 years old. The complete set of primary teeth is in the mouth from the age of 2 ½ to 3 years of age to 6 to 7 years of age.
Other primary tooth eruption facts:
A general rule of thumb is that for every 6 months of life, approximately 4 teeth will erupt.
Girls generally precede boys in tooth eruption
Lower teeth usually erupt before upper teeth
Teeth in both jaws usually erupt in pairs – one on the right and one on the left
Primary teeth are smaller in size and whiter in color than the permanent teeth that will follow
By the time a child is 2 to 3 years of age, all primary teeth should have erupted
Shortly after age 4, the jaw and facial bones of the child begin to grow, creating spaces between the primary teeth. This is a perfectly natural growth process that provides the necessary space for the larger permanent teeth to emerge. Between the ages of 6 and 12, a mixture of both primary teeth and permanent teeth reside in the mouth.
Why Is it Important to Care for Baby Teeth?
While it's true that primary teeth are only in the mouth a short period of time, they play a vital role in the following ways:
They reserve space for their permanent counterparts.
They give the face its normal appearance.
They aid in the development of clear speech.
They help attain good nutrition (missing or decayed teeth make it difficult to chew causing children to reject foods).
They help give a healthy start to the permanent teeth (decay and infection in baby teeth can cause dark spots on the permanent teeth developing beneath it).
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