If this is life-threatening
Call 911 or go to the nearest ER for facial swelling that affects breathing or swallowing, uncontrolled bleeding, or trauma to the head. A spreading dental infection can be a medical emergency.
Emergency dentist in Brooklyn: what to do now
A knocked-out tooth, a screaming toothache at 2am, a cracked molar from a bagel — dental emergencies always seem to happen at the worst time. Here's exactly what to do for the most common ones, and how to get urgent care in Brooklyn.
What should I do in a dental emergency?
In a dental emergency, act fast and call a dentist the same day. For a knocked-out adult tooth, pick it up by the crown (not the root), gently rinse it, and try to reinsert it into the socket; if you can't, keep it in milk or saliva and see a dentist within 30–60 minutes for the best chance of saving it. For severe toothache, rinse with warm salt water, take over-the-counter ibuprofen, and use a cold compress on the cheek — but pain with facial swelling or fever may signal an abscess that needs urgent antibiotics and drainage. For a broken or chipped tooth, save any pieces, rinse, and protect the tooth. Call an emergency dentist immediately; if there's significant facial swelling affecting breathing or swallowing, uncontrolled bleeding, or head trauma, go to the ER or call 911.
Knocked-out tooth (avulsed tooth)
This is the most time-sensitive dental emergency. For a permanent (adult) tooth, you may have under an hour to save it:
- Pick the tooth up by the crown (the white part) — never touch the root.
- If it's dirty, rinse it gently with milk or saline for a few seconds. Don't scrub.
- Try to place it back in the socket and bite gently on gauze to hold it.
- If you can't reinsert it, keep it moist in milk, in saliva (inside your cheek if safe), or in a tooth-preservation kit. Do not store it in plain water.
- Get to a dentist within 30–60 minutes.
For a baby tooth, do not reinsert it — call your pediatric dentist for guidance.
Severe toothache
A persistent, throbbing toothache often means decay has reached the nerve, or there's an infection. While you arrange care:
- Rinse with warm salt water and floss gently to remove any trapped food.
- Take over-the-counter pain relief (ibuprofen works well for dental pain).
- Apply a cold compress to your cheek, 15 minutes on, 15 off.
- Don't put aspirin directly on the gum — it can burn the tissue.
Toothache with fever, a bad taste, or swelling in your face or jaw can indicate an abscess — see a dentist urgently, as infections can spread.
Dental abscess (infection)
An abscess is a pocket of pus from a bacterial infection, usually painful and sometimes with swelling, fever, or a pimple-like bump on the gum. This is not something to wait out. You typically need a dentist to drain it and prescribe antibiotics, followed by a root canal or extraction. Swelling that affects your breathing or swallowing is an emergency — go to the ER.
Broken, chipped or cracked tooth
- Save any broken pieces and rinse your mouth with warm water.
- Use gauze on any bleeding; apply a cold compress to reduce swelling.
- Cover a sharp edge with dental wax or sugarless gum to protect your cheek and tongue.
- See a dentist promptly — a cracked tooth can worsen fast.
Lost filling or crown
Usually urgent-ish rather than an emergency. Keep the crown if you have it, avoid chewing on that side, and you can temporarily reseat a crown with over-the-counter dental cement from a pharmacy. Book a repair within a few days.
How to find emergency dental care in Brooklyn
- Call your own dentist first. Many offices reserve same-day slots for emergencies and have an after-hours line.
- Search "emergency dentist Brooklyn open now." Some practices offer evening and weekend urgent care.
- Hospital dental clinics and FQHCs handle urgent cases and accept Medicaid and uninsured patients.
- Hospital ER for severe swelling, trauma, or uncontrolled bleeding — they can manage pain and infection and refer you, though they can't usually do dental repairs.
What emergency dental care costs
An emergency exam and X-ray typically runs $100–$250, plus the cost of treatment — a simple extraction ($150–$400), a root canal ($900–$1,800), or temporary measures. If you're uninsured, ask about payment plans or CareCredit on the spot; see our no-insurance options. Prevent future emergencies with regular checkups — find the right office in our guide to finding a dentist.