Pain after a dental filling refers to sensitivity, discomfort, or aching in a tooth following restorative treatment.
While mild sensitivity is common, sharp, worsening, or persistent pain may indicate bite imbalance, nerve irritation, cracking, or restoration failure and should be assessed promptly.
Sometimes — pain that worsens, persists, or returns after a tooth extraction should be assessed urgently, particularly if symptoms do not improve after the first few days or are accompanied by swelling, bad taste, or increasing discomfort.
Evaluation within a structured emergency dentistry pathway helps determine whether healing is delayed, a complication such as dry socket is developing, or further stabilising care is required.
Immediate dental emergency (same-day care required):
Same-day urgent dental problem:
Possibly normal (monitor closely):
Pain that persists or escalates should always be reassessed.
Pain after a filling that does not resolve often worsens without treatment.
Short-term risks:
Medium-term risks:
Severe outcomes:
Treatment focuses on identifying the cause of pain, relieving discomfort, and protecting the tooth from further damage.
At Deepcar Dental, post-filling pain is assessed by our clinical team led by Dr Ibraheem Ijaz, GDC-registered Principal Dentist with advanced training in restorative and digital dentistry. Same-day assessment is available where clinically appropriate.
You Should
Do NOT:
Most sensitivity settles within 1–2 weeks. Pain that worsens or lasts longer should be assessed.
Mild discomfort is normal. Sharp, worsening, or bite-related pain is not.
Not always. Only irreversible nerve inflammation or infection requires root canal treatment.
Pain after a filling should settle steadily. If discomfort worsens, lingers, or becomes sharp when biting, prompt assessment can prevent nerve damage or cracking.