Let’s be clear about this: the assumption that brushing is universal, even in cities, crumbles the moment you step off Delhi’s Metro or exit a Mumbai café. We’re far from it.
The Cultural and Environmental Roots of Nighttime Oral Care
India isn’t one story. It’s millions. And in a country where 66% of the population lives in rural areas, the concept of “brushing at night” isn’t a habit passed down through routine — it’s often a learned behavior introduced by schools, NGOs, or mobile health camps. Tradition runs deep. For generations, people cleaned their teeth with neem twigs, salt, or charcoal. These methods weren’t timed to circadian rhythms like modern dental advice suggests — they followed meal cycles. Finish eating? Clean your mouth. But that didn’t always mean “before bed.”
And that’s exactly where things get complicated. Nighttime, in many households, isn’t a quiet transition into sleep. It’s when chai is shared, news is watched, and families gather. Brushing might come after, if someone remembers — or it might not happen at all. Because in villages across Uttar Pradesh or Odisha, electricity can be spotty, lights go out early, and oral hygiene isn’t prioritized over more immediate concerns — water, food, safety.
I find this overrated — the idea that awareness campaigns alone will fix this. You can tell people brushing at night prevents cavities, but if toothpaste costs 40 rupees and feeds no one, behavior won’t shift. Not without infrastructure.
Traditional Practices vs. Modern Dental Advice
Chewing neem or babool sticks isn’t just folk medicine — it has science behind it. Neem contains antibacterial compounds, and the mechanical action of gnawing a twig does remove plaque. But it’s inconsistent. The frayed end might not reach the gumline. There’s no fluoride. And most importantly, it’s rarely done with “bedtime” in mind. It’s done post-meal, often in daylight.
Modern dentistry, of course, insists on nighttime brushing as non-negotiable. Saliva production drops at night. Bacteria multiply. Residual sugars turn into acid. That’s when decay sets in. But explaining this in rural Tamil Nadu, where a 55-year-old farmer has never seen a dentist, requires more than pamphlets. It needs trust.
Urbanization and the Rise of the Nighttime Routine
In contrast, cities like Bangalore and Hyderabad show a different trend. Middle-class professionals — especially those exposed to Western media — are more likely to adopt twice-daily brushing. Malls sell electric toothbrushes for ₹3,500. Instagram influencers post “nighttime skincare and oral routines.” It’s aspirational. But it’s also uneven. Even in Gurgaon, where luxury apartments have 24-hour water, domestic workers cleaning those homes might not have the same habits — or access to the same products.
Why Twice-Daily Brushing Rates Remain Below 50%
You’d think, with so much information available, the number would be higher. Yet only 47% of urban Indians brush twice a day, according to a 2022 National Oral Health Survey. Rural numbers? Closer to 28%. That’s not ignorance — it’s context. Let’s unpack it.
The Accessibility Gap: Toothbrushes, Toothpaste, and Time
In remote corners of Assam, a standard toothbrush costs roughly 15 rupees — a small sum, yes, but if you’re surviving on ₹300 a day, every purchase is a trade-off. Milk for the kids? Or a tube of Colgate? And toothpaste with fluoride — that’s a luxury. Many families use soap, ash, or plain water. Not because they don’t care, but because they’re making hard choices.
Time matters too. Night shifts, late commutes, caregiving duties — these eat into personal routines. A nurse in Ahmedabad might finish her 12-hour shift at 10 p.m., too exhausted to do more than rinse her mouth. Is that negligence? Or reality?
Education Levels and Health Literacy
Data shows a strong correlation between literacy and oral hygiene. In states like Kerala, where literacy exceeds 96%, twice-daily brushing rates hit 61%. In Bihar, where literacy is 63.8%, the number drops to 31%. The thing is, knowing why you should brush at night — not just that you should — changes behavior. But how many school curricula teach saliva pH cycles? How many ASHA workers explain nocturnal bacterial growth?
And yet — campaigns like “Swasth Bharat, Swasth Muh” (Healthy India, Healthy Mouth) are making inroads. Since 2019, over 120,000 rural schools have incorporated daily brushing drills. Children go home and remind their parents. That’s how norms shift.
The Role of Media, Marketing, and Social Pressure
Colgate didn’t become a household name by accident. Since entering India in 1931, it’s spent decades tying toothpaste to modernity, confidence, and social acceptance. Ads from the 90s showed young men losing job interviews because of “bad breath.” Today, it’s more subtle — TikTok dentists demonstrating “nighttime oral rituals” with minty foams and sonic brushes.
But marketing only works if people believe the promise. And in a culture where arranged marriages still dominate, appearance — including fresh breath — matters. A 2021 YouGov survey found that 68% of urban Indians considered oral hygiene “important for first impressions.” That’s a powerful motivator. Could it be stronger than health warnings?
Maybe. Because people don’t brush to avoid periodontitis — they brush to feel confident at a wedding, to smile in a selfie, to not be embarrassed on a date. Emotion drives habit more than science ever will.
Electric vs. Manual: Tools of the Trade in Indian Homes
Electric toothbrushes are booming — sales grew 22% annually between 2020 and 2023. But they’re still niche. At ₹1,800 and up, they’re unaffordable for most. And they require consistent electricity, charging stations, replaceable heads — a whole ecosystem that doesn’t exist in half the country.
Manual brushes dominate — 94% of the market. But even here, quality varies. A ₹5 brush from a roadside stall won’t last a week. A premium one from Nykaa might, but costs 20 times more. So people reuse bristles long after they fray. Which defeats the purpose — especially at night, when effectiveness matters most.
And that’s exactly where innovation could help. Bamboo brushes? They’re trendy in Bengaluru cafes. But biodegradable doesn’t mean better cleaning. We need affordable, durable, and accessible — not just Instagrammable.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is brushing once a day enough for Indians?
Not really, no. Dentists agree: once-daily brushing, usually in the morning, leaves teeth vulnerable overnight. But for millions, it’s the only feasible option. The problem is, plaque hardens in 48 hours. Skipping night brushing regularly increases cavity risk by at least 3.2 times — according to a 2020 study from AIIMS. So is it “enough”? Biologically, no. Practically? For some, it’s all they can manage.
Do children in India brush their teeth at night?
Better than adults, thanks to school programs. The government’s “School Health Promotion Programme” includes supervised brushing in 18 states. In pilot districts like Thrissur, nighttime brushing among kids jumped from 39% to 67% in three years. But consistency fades outside school. At home, parents might not enforce it — especially if they don’t do it themselves.
What are the best affordable toothpastes in India?
Dabur Red is still popular — ₹25 for 100g, herbal, but low fluoride. For cavity protection, dentists recommend Sensodyne or Patanjali’s fluoride variant, both around ₹90 for 100g. Colgate Total, at ₹110, offers 12-hour bacteria protection — worth it if you can afford it. But honestly, it is unclear whether herbal pastes prevent decay long-term. Experts disagree.
The Bottom Line
Do Indians brush their teeth at night? The answer isn’t yes or no — it’s “it depends.” It depends on income, education, location, and even electricity supply. Urban professionals? Increasingly, yes. Rural farmers? Often, no. Children in government schools? Getting there. Elderly in remote hamlets? Unlikely.
But here’s the truth: we don’t need perfection. We need progress. Even a 10% increase in nighttime brushing could prevent over 20 million cavities in a decade — a conservative estimate based on current decay rates. That’s not trivial.
My personal recommendation? Stop shaming people for not brushing. Start making it easier. Subsidize fluoride toothpaste. Train more rural dental therapists. Integrate oral health into primary care. Because behavior change isn’t about awareness — it’s about access.
And yes, I am convinced that the toothbrush, humble as it is, could be one of India’s most underrated tools for public health. If we stop treating it like a luxury — and start treating it like a right.