Early or 'Phase 1' treatment addresses developing bite and spacing issues while a child is still growing.
The American Association of Orthodontists recommends a first orthodontic evaluation by about age 7. At that age an orthodontist can spot crossbites, severe crowding, or jaw-growth issues and, when needed, use appliances like palatal expanders or partial braces to create space and guide development. Not every child needs early treatment, many simply get monitored until all permanent teeth arrive. Local family-focused practices commonly offer complimentary early evaluations.
Periodic check-ups to track development before any active treatment.
An appliance that widens the upper jaw to correct crossbites and create room.
Limited braces on select teeth to correct specific early problems.
Orthodontists are the bite- and tooth-alignment specialists. After dental school they complete two to three years of accredited residency in orthodontics and dentofacial orthopedics. The defining credentials are AAO membership and board certification — Diplomate of the American Board of Orthodontics (ABO).
Procedure facts on this page draw on authoritative medical sources. Confirm specifics in a consultation.
American Association of Orthodontists (AAO) ↗American Dental Association — MouthHealthy ↗Verify a dentist’s credentials and Florida license yourself:
AAO — American Association of Orthodontists ↗ ABO — American Board of Orthodontics ↗ Florida Board of Dentistry — License verification ↗