The Cultural Roots of Oral Care in the Arab World
Let’s be clear about this: oral hygiene in Arab societies didn’t start with Colgate. It began centuries ago—with a twig. The miswak, a natural tooth-cleaning twig from the arak tree (Salvadora persica), has been used across the Middle East and North Africa for over 1,400 years. Mentioned in Hadiths—sayings attributed to the Prophet Muhammad—its use is considered not just hygienic but spiritually significant. “If it were not for the fear of hardship on my followers,” the Prophet reportedly said, “I would have ordered them to use the miswak before every prayer.” That’s five times a day. Imagine that level of dental diligence.
And yet, people don’t think about this enough: the miswak isn’t some archaic relic. It’s still sold in supermarkets in Riyadh, Amman, and Cairo—next to Oral-B and Sensodyne. Some studies suggest it has antibacterial properties comparable to modern toothpaste. A 2012 study published in the Journal of Intercultural Dentistry found that miswak users had significantly lower plaque indices than those using only toothbrushes—though the sample size was small, and experts disagree on how generalizable that is. But here’s the kicker: many Arabs do both. They brush with toothpaste and chew on miswak. It’s not an either/or. It’s layered hygiene—a fusion of tradition and science.
Religious Influence on Daily Dental Habits
The five daily prayers in Islam require ritual purification—wudu—which includes cleaning the mouth. This isn’t symbolic. It’s physical. And over time, that routine embeds oral care into the rhythm of life. In Morocco, you’ll see men in djellabas pausing at mosque entrances, miswak in hand, scrubbing their teeth with focused, almost meditative strokes. In Dubai, luxury malls sell gold-plated miswak cases for 380 AED ($103). Tradition, status, and health converge. But—and this is important—not every Arab is religious. Urban youth in Beirut or Tunis might skip wudu but still care about fresh breath. Why? Because they’re on dating apps. Because they work in client-facing jobs. Because they live in a globalized world where appearance matters.
The Rise of Modern Dentistry in Arab Cities
Go to any clinic in Doha or Abu Dhabi and you’ll see the stats: over 70% of adults in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries visit a dentist at least once a year. That’s higher than in some Western nations. Private dental chains like Dr. Michael’s in Egypt or Euromed in Jordan have expanded rapidly—fueled by rising incomes and insurance coverage. A basic cleaning in Cairo runs about 300 EGP ($6.50), while a whitening session in Kuwait can hit 150 KWD ($490). That changes everything. When oral care becomes accessible—and aspirational—habits shift. And yes, toothbrush ownership? Near universal in urban areas. Even in rural Yemen, despite the war, NGOs report that toothbrushes remain among the most requested hygiene items in aid packages.
Brushing Rates and Regional Disparities
We’re far from it being uniform. While the UAE reports 92% of adults brush twice daily (WHO, 2021), in conflict zones like Syria or Sudan, access to toothpaste is secondary to clean water and food. A 2020 UNICEF survey found only 41% of households in northwest Syria had any oral hygiene products. But that’s not about culture. That’s about war. And poverty. And infrastructure collapse. So no, it’s not accurate to say “Arabs don’t brush.” It’s more precise to say: “In stable, high-income Arab countries, brushing is standard. In fragile states, hygiene suffers—like everywhere else under siege.”
Then there’s age. A study across six Arab nations showed that while 83% of adults over 30 brush daily, only 56% of teenagers do. Why? Not rebellion. Not ignorance. Because 27% of teens in Saudi Arabia cite “lack of time” as the main reason—school, part-time jobs, social media. In Amman, dentists report a spike in cavities among 15–19-year-olds since 2018. Could it be the sugar? Jordan imports over 180,000 tons of sugar annually—up 12% in five years. Energy drinks like Code Red and Burn are cheap and everywhere. Try finding a high school in Cairo without kids sipping fluorescent soda between classes. And that’s exactly where public health campaigns fall short.
Western Stereotypes vs. Reality
Where it gets tricky is perception. Non-Arabs often conflate beards with poor hygiene. A 2019 UK survey found 34% of respondents believed “Middle Eastern men are less likely to brush their teeth.” This, despite data showing British men are more likely to skip brushing than their Arab counterparts in London’s Arab communities. How? Because cultural markers get misread. A full beard isn’t dirt—it’s identity, faith, fashion. And yes, some beards trap food. But so do mustaches. Or dreadlocks. Or long hair. The issue remains: we judge what we don’t understand.
And because Western media rarely shows Arab families brushing together, or ads for Sensodyne in Arabic, the assumption lingers. It’s a bit like assuming all Americans eat fast food because of Hollywood—except no one questions American hygiene. The problem is asymmetry. We normalize Western habits. We exoticize others.
Modern Trends: Veneers, Whitening, and Dental Tourism
Dental vanity? Arabs aren’t immune. In fact, they’re ahead of the curve. Turkey and Jordan have become dental tourism hubs—especially for Gulf patients. A full set of veneers in Riyadh costs $6,000. Same procedure in Amman? $2,200—with a five-star hotel stay included. Over 180,000 medical tourists visited Jordan in 2022, 41% for dental work. Clinics in Istanbul offer “Hollywood smiles” in 72 hours. Package includes airport pickup, translator, and Instagram-ready after photos. Is it excessive? Maybe. But then again, South Korea has more plastic surgeons per capita than any country. Different culture, same impulse: perfect teeth as social currency.
In short, the Arab world isn’t lagging. In many ways, it’s innovating—blending ancient tools with cutting-edge tech. The miswak is now sold in gel form. Electric toothbrushes with Quranic timers exist (seriously—set your brushing to the length of Surah Al-Ikhlas). The fusion isn’t forced. It’s organic.
Oral Health Challenges: Sugar, Smoking, and Access
That said, problems persist. Diabetes rates in Saudi Arabia hit 18.3% in 2023—nearly double the global average. Gum disease is a known complication. Then there’s shisha. In Lebanon, 44% of adults under 30 smoke flavored tobacco weekly. One 2021 study found shisha users had 3.2 times higher risk of periodontitis. Combine that with high sugar intake, and you’ve got a public health time bomb. But because anti-smoking campaigns focus on lungs, not gums, the dental angle gets ignored.
And access? Still uneven. Rural Egypt has one dentist per 12,500 people. Urban centers have one per 1,200. That’s a tenfold gap. Tele-dentistry is emerging, but spotty internet in places like southern Sudan limits reach. Honestly, it is unclear how fast this will change without serious investment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the miswak better than a toothbrush?
Not “better”—different. It mechanically cleans and releases antiseptic compounds, but it doesn’t deliver fluoride. Dentists in Jeddah often recommend using both: miswak for fresh breath and tradition, toothpaste for cavity protection. The ideal? Synergy.
Do all Arab countries have the same brushing habits?
No. Urban Gulf states lead in dental care. Conflict-affected regions trail. A teen in Doha likely brushes more than one in Idlib—not due to culture, but stability. Infrastructure matters more than ethnicity.
Why do some Arabs have yellow teeth despite brushing?
Staining from tea, coffee, and shisha is common. Also, genetic enamel variation. Some people’s teeth just yellow faster. Whitening is popular—but expensive. A single session can cost up to 800 AED ($218) in Dubai.
The Bottom Line
I am convinced that the question “Do Arabs brush their teeth?” says more about the asker than the answer. It’s rooted in bias, not observation. The reality? Brushing is widespread, often ritualized, and increasingly sophisticated. To reduce a billion people to a single hygiene habit is absurd. We don’t do it to Europeans. We shouldn’t do it to Arabs. Yes, challenges exist—just like in every region. But the narrative of neglect? That’s a myth. And one worth brushing away.