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Can You Get Cavities from Kissing?
This is a question I hear more often than you might think. And the short answer is — yes, the bacteria that cause cavities can be transmitted through kissing. But let’s take a closer look at how likely that really is.
Cavity-causing bacteria typically colonize the mouth in early childhood. If someone in your family has tooth decay, poorly done dental work, or lacks proper oral hygiene, those bacteria are often passed on to children long before their first kiss.
So by the time you’re in high school, college, or adulthood — you and your partner likely already share many of the same oral microbes. Transmission through kissing becomes highly unlikely, simply because most of us already have those bacteria.
What really matters isn’t who you kiss, but how they care for their mouth.
Someone with fresh breath and good oral hygiene habits — that’s a great sign not just for dental health, but for overall well-being.
This goes beyond bacteria.
Let’s talk about viruses — specifically herpes and shingles. These aren’t typically acquired in adulthood through kissing.
They’re usually picked up much earlier, when a two-year-old plays in the park or goes to preschool and catches a common cold. What seems like just a cold is often the first contact with the herpes virus.
Roughly 20% of those children will carry that virus in their nervous system for life. It stays dormant in a protected space and can reactivate later — with stress, sunlight, trauma, or a weakened immune system. That’s what shingles is.
So, what’s the takeaway?
You don’t need to fear kissing.
But you should pay attention to oral hygiene — your own and your partner’s. That tells you more than you might think.
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