Lying in bed trying to sleep is hard enough on its own. Add a throbbing toothache and the night can feel endless. If the pain seems significantly worse after dark than it did during the day, that sensation is not imaginary. There are several well-documented physiological reasons why toothache tends to intensify at night, and understanding them makes the experience feel at least slightly less maddening.
Why toothache gets worse when you lie down
During the day, the brain is occupied. Work, conversation, movement and the general noise of being awake all compete for attention, which means pain signals have to fight harder to register. At night, with nothing to distract the mind, the brain has full bandwidth to focus on discomfort, and it does exactly that.
Beyond distraction, the act of lying down itself changes things physically. Moving from an upright position to horizontal increases blood pressure in the head and around the jaw, which puts more pressure on the nerves and blood vessels surrounding the affected tooth. That pressure translates directly into intensified throbbing.
There is also a hormonal element at play. The body produces less cortisol in the evening hours. Cortisol carries natural anti-inflammatory and mild pain-relieving properties, so its decline at night removes one of the body’s quiet buffers against discomfort. At the same time, warmth from blankets and a relaxed body temperature allows inflamed tissue around the tooth to expand slightly, which can amplify the sensation further.
Toothache as a signal worth taking seriously
Before getting to the immediate question of how to get through the night, it is worth pausing on what toothache is communicating in the first place. Pain in a tooth is the body’s way of flagging that something is wrong, whether that is decay, inflammation at the root or the early stages of a more serious infection. The first step the following morning should always be booking an appointment with a dentist rather than waiting to see if the pain resolves on its own.
How to manage the pain until morning
Cold is one of the most accessible and effective short-term options. An ice cube held near the affected area or a cold pack wrapped in a cloth and pressed gently against the cheek can reduce inflammation and temporarily dull the nerve response. The relief is not permanent but it is real and it is immediate.
Over-the-counter pain relievers like ibuprofen and paracetamol can take the edge off as well. Both work reasonably well for dental pain, though neither should be used for more than three days at a stretch given the potential for side effects with extended use.
One popular home remedy worth approaching with caution is cloves. The oil found in cloves contains a compound with known analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties, and the idea of chewing on one to ease tooth pain has been passed around for generations. The problem is that clove residue can lodge between teeth and in the surrounding tissue, which dental professionals report having to remove and which can make the original problem worse rather than better.
Elevating the head slightly while sleeping can also help reduce the blood pressure buildup around the jaw that makes nighttime pain so much more intense than daytime discomfort.

