Table Of Contents 1 Why does Invisalign cause discomfort at all? 2 Is Invisalign painful when you first start? 3 Do new aligners always hurt when you
Does Invisalign Hurt? What Patients Really Feel Week by Week
One of the most common questions we hear at Eccleshill Dental when patients are considering Invisalign is a simple one: will it hurt?
It is a fair question, and you deserve a straight answer rather than reassuring language that glosses over the reality. The honest answer is that most patients experience some pressure and soreness, particularly in the first couple of days of wearing each new set of aligners. For the vast majority of patients this is mild and manageable. But the experience does vary from person to person, and understanding what to expect makes the whole process much easier.
This guide walks you through what Invisalign discomfort actually feels like, why it happens, what helps, and when you should contact your dentist.

What this post covers
- Why Invisalign causes discomfort and what is actually happening inside your teeth
- What to expect in the first week, at each aligner change, and as treatment progresses
- How Invisalign compares to fixed braces for comfort
- What actually helps, including the correct advice on pain relief
- When to contact your dentist
Why does Invisalign cause discomfort at all?
To understand why Invisalign causes soreness, it helps to understand what is actually happening to your teeth during treatment.
Invisalign works through a series of custom-made, removable, clear plastic trays called aligners, each of which is designed to be slightly different from your current tooth position. When you place a new set of aligners in your mouth, they do not sit perfectly flat against your teeth. They fit the position your teeth need to reach, not the position they are currently in. Your teeth need to move to match the aligner shape.
That movement happens through a process called bone remodelling. The aligner applies gentle, controlled pressure to specific teeth, which creates pressure and tension zones in the periodontal ligament, the tissue that connects each tooth root to the surrounding jawbone. In response to this pressure, specialised cells called osteoclasts break down bone on the pressure side, while osteoblasts build new bone on the tension side. This biological process is what allows your teeth to move gradually through the jaw.
The soreness you feel is a direct result of that pressure on the periodontal ligament and the early inflammatory response in the surrounding tissue. It is not damage. It is the same fundamental process that happens with all forms of orthodontic treatment, fixed braces included. The difference with Invisalign is that the force is applied in smaller, more frequent increments, which is why many patients find it more comfortable than traditional wire braces.
Is Invisalign painful when you first start?
The first week tends to produce the most noticeable discomfort. Your teeth are under orthodontic pressure for the first time, your mouth is adjusting to wearing something for 20 to 22 hours a day, and your periodontal ligament has not yet adapted to regular movement.
Here is what the majority of patients at our Bradford practice describe in the first seven days:
- A feeling of pressure across the teeth when the aligners are first placed in, particularly on the teeth the first set of aligners is targeting
- Mild soreness when biting down, most noticeable in the first 24 to 48 hours
- Some awareness of the aligner edges against the inside of the lips or cheeks, which usually settles within a few days as soft tissue adapts
- Occasionally a very slight lisp when speaking, which most patients find resolves within the first week as the tongue adjusts
What most patients do not experience: sharp pain, pain that disrupts sleep, or pain that requires anything beyond standard over-the-counter pain relief. If you are experiencing any of those, contact us.
What patients actually say
The word we hear most from patients describing the first week is ‘pressure’ rather than pain. Many describe it as similar to the feeling after an intense workout, an awareness that something is working, not that something is wrong.
Do new aligners always hurt when you change them?
Each time you move to a new set of aligners, typically every one to two weeks, you will likely notice some degree of the same pressure returning for a day or two. Each new set is again slightly ahead of your current tooth position, so the periodontal ligament experiences fresh pressure.
Most patients find that the discomfort with each successive aligner change reduces as treatment progresses. Your teeth are already in motion; the gap between where they currently sit and where the new aligner needs them to be is smaller than it was at the start.
One tip that works well for many of our patients: put your new aligners in last thing at night, just before bed. Your teeth begin adjusting during sleep, and you wake up with the worst of the pressure already behind you.
How long does Invisalign soreness last?
Soreness from each new set of aligners typically peaks in the first 24 to 48 hours and then reduces noticeably. By day three or four with a new set, most patients are no longer thinking about it.
The overall pattern across treatment tends to follow a predictable arc. The first week is usually the most uncomfortable. Weeks two to six see most patients adapting significantly, with each aligner change feeling less significant than the last. By the midpoint of treatment, many patients tell us they are surprised by how routine the process has become.
If soreness from a particular set of aligners is not improving after five to seven days, or is getting worse rather than better, mention it at your next review appointment.
What to expect week by week
| Timeframe | What most patients experience | What helps most |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1-2 (first aligners) | Noticeable pressure; mild soreness when biting down | Paracetamol as needed; soft foods; change aligners at bedtime |
| Days 3-7 | Pressure eases; mouth adapts to wearing aligners for 20-22 hours | Gentle biting pressure on the aligner helps it seat correctly |
| Each new aligner change (days 1-2) | Mild pressure returns for a day or two | Change aligners at bedtime so the peak pressure happens during sleep |
| Weeks 4-6 onwards | Most patients barely notice each aligner change | Consistent 20-22 hour daily wear keeps treatment on track |
| Final set of aligners | May feel noticeably tight as teeth reach their target position | This is expected and normal |
Is Invisalign more comfortable than fixed braces?
For most patients, yes, and there are specific reasons for this that are worth understanding before you make a treatment decision.
Fixed braces work through a wire that runs between brackets bonded to each tooth. At each appointment, the wire is tightened or adjusted. This applies a relatively sudden increase in force, concentrated on specific teeth, and the metal brackets and wire can cause rubbing and ulceration against the soft tissue inside the mouth.
Invisalign applies force more gradually. Each set of aligners moves teeth by a smaller increment than a typical brace adjustment. There are no wires, no brackets, and the aligner surface is smooth. Most patients describe fixed brace tightening as a sharper, more immediate discomfort, while Invisalign pressure feels more like a steady squeeze that fades over a few days.
That said, every patient is different, and the most important factor in any treatment decision is always clinical suitability, not comfort preference alone. At Eccleshill Dental we offer Invisalign, fixed braces, and Fastbraces, and will always advise you honestly on which is most appropriate for your teeth.
For patients who are nervous about treatment
If worry about pain or discomfort has been one of the reasons you have been putting off teeth straightening, Invisalign is one of the gentler options available. At Eccleshill Dental we also offer sedation for patients who find dental treatment difficult, and our team has extensive experience in helping anxious patients feel at ease from the moment they walk through the door. You can find out more about how we support nervous patients on our dedicated page.
What is the best pain relief to use during Invisalign?
This is worth answering carefully because the common answer, ‘take ibuprofen if it hurts’, is not the most accurate advice for Invisalign patients specifically.
Research published across multiple studies from 2004 to 2024 shows that ibuprofen and aspirin, which work by inhibiting prostaglandin synthesis, may reduce the rate of orthodontic tooth movement. Prostaglandins play a direct role in the bone remodelling process that allows teeth to move, so consistently blocking them during treatment may slow your progress. The evidence is not conclusive, and the effect appears to vary with dosage and how regularly the medication is taken, but the concern is real enough that it is worth knowing about.
Paracetamol does not carry the same concern. Unlike ibuprofen, paracetamol acts primarily on pain pathways in the central nervous system and does not function as an anti-inflammatory in the peripheral tissues. Multiple studies have found that paracetamol does not interfere with orthodontic tooth movement and is the preferred choice for managing discomfort during Invisalign treatment.
In practice this means:
- Paracetamol taken as directed is the recommended first choice for Invisalign discomfort
- Occasional ibuprofen use, one or two doses in the first day after an aligner change, is unlikely to have a meaningful impact on your treatment
- Taking ibuprofen regularly throughout treatment is best avoided if possible
- If you need pain relief consistently on most days of treatment, mention it to your dentist as this may indicate something worth checking
Practical alternatives that many patients find helpful alongside or instead of pain relief:
- Changing aligners at bedtime so the peak pressure period happens during sleep
- Gentle biting pressure on the aligner, pressing down with your fingertips or using an aligner seating stick, helps the aligner fit flat against the teeth and can reduce the sensation of resistance
- Sticking to softer foods on the first day or two after each aligner change
- Cold water drunk with aligners in can give temporary relief from soreness
When should I contact Eccleshill Dental about Invisalign discomfort?
Most Invisalign discomfort is expected and resolves without any intervention. Contact us if you notice any of the following:
- Sharp or severe pain that does not feel like the usual pressure sensation. This is not a typical Invisalign symptom
- Discomfort that is getting worse rather than better after the first few days with a new set of aligners. Aligners may need to be reviewed
- One specific tooth that is significantly more painful than the others. This may indicate an underlying issue with that tooth or a fit problem
- An aligner with a visible gap, or one that will not sit flat against the teeth. Do not try to force it into position; call us
- Any new clicking, popping, or jaw pain during treatment. This is worth raising at your next review appointment
The honest summary
Invisalign is not pain-free. You will almost certainly feel some pressure and soreness, particularly in the early weeks and for a day or two each time you change to a new set of aligners. For most patients this is mild and manageable with paracetamol and a realistic understanding of what is normal.
What patients at Eccleshill Dental consistently tell us is that the discomfort was less than they feared before starting, and that the end result made it worthwhile. Knowing what to expect from the start makes a significant difference, which is exactly why we wrote this.
Wondering how long Invisalign treatment takes?
If you are now wondering how long Invisalign treatment actually takes, from the first consultation to the final aligner, we cover that in detail in our guide to Invisalign treatment timelines. Treatment at Eccleshill Dental typically runs from 3 to 12 months depending on complexity, and we will always give you a realistic estimate at your consultation rather than a best-case figure.
Considering Invisalign at Eccleshill Dental in Bradford?
If you would like to find out whether Invisalign is the right option for you, we offer consultations at our practice at Rillington Mead, Bradford BD10 0ED. At your consultation we will assess your teeth, explain exactly what your treatment would involve, how long it would take, and give you clear pricing with no hidden costs. There is no obligation to proceed.
We also offer 0% finance on Invisalign treatment, and our membership plan includes a discount across treatments. Visit our fees page for full pricing.
Invisalign at Eccleshill Dental: eccleshilldental.co.uk/treatments/teeth-straightening/invisalign/
Call us: 01274 633 406
Email: info@eccleshilldental.com
WhatsApp: 07741 503259



