Topic hub · Oral Hygiene

Oral hygiene: what the research says about brushing, flossing, and daily care

Toothbrushes, pastes, floss, mouthwash, technique, separating routine essentials from expensive upsells.

Oral hygiene is 90% consistency and 10% product choice. The trials are unambiguous: someone who brushes twice a day with a fluoride toothpaste and cleans between their teeth once a day will out-perform someone using the most expensive electric toothbrush on the market inconsistently. The gap between "good routine" and "perfect routine" is small; the gap between "good routine" and "skipping days" is enormous.

That said, product choice does matter at the margins, and the margins compound over decades. Electric toothbrushes remove slightly more plaque than manual ones. Interdental brushes reach spaces floss doesn't. Fluoride concentration matters. Timing matters (don't brush right after coffee).

The guides below cover both the fundamentals (how to brush and floss properly) and the specific product-level questions (sonic vs oscillating, which floss type, what mouthwash for what condition). We cite primary research for every claim.

0 guides · 0 sources cited · Last reviewed July 2026 · Maintained by The Editorial Team

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