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Sports Mouth Guard Set

Sports Mouth Guard Set: is it right for my child?

A Sports Mouth Guard Set is protective sporting equipment that cushions a child's teeth and jaw during contact sports — not a therapy or developmental tool. It is right for a child who plays a contact or fast-ball sport, fitted comfortably so it does not affect breathing or speech, with a dental check if braces or loose teeth are present.

Sports Mouth Guard Set: is it right for my child?
Sports Mouth Guard Set: right for your child? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A simple piece of sports kit, a big question for a worried parent — let's sort out what a mouth guard set actually does.

In short

A Sports Mouth Guard Set is a piece of protective sporting equipment — usually a soft, mouldable plastic guard (and often a carry case) that fits over your child's upper teeth to cushion knocks during contact sports like football, hockey, cricket or martial arts. It is not a therapy tool and not a developmental aid — it protects teeth, lips and jaw from injury. It is right for your child if they play a sport where there is a real risk of a blow to the mouth, and it should be fitted comfortably so it does not interfere with breathing or speaking.

What it is, and when it fits

Most children's sets are the "boil-and-bite" type: warmed in hot water, then bitten into so the guard moulds to your child's teeth. Choose one when your child:
  • Plays a contact or fast-ball sport (football, hockey, boxing, skating, cricket as a keeper or close fielder).
  • Has their own front teeth coming through that you want to protect.
  • Can tolerate something in their mouth comfortably for the duration of play.

A few sensible cautions. If your child wears braces or has loose milk teeth, ask a dentist before fitting a boil-and-bite guard — a custom-made guard is often safer. If your child has strong sensory sensitivities around the mouth, or pockets food, or has difficulty managing saliva, introduce it gently and watch that it does not affect breathing or comfort. A mouth guard does not replace a helmet or face cage where those are needed.

The Pinnacle way

A mouth guard is everyday sports equipment, not a clinical decision — but if your worry is really about how your child copes with things in or around the mouth (chewing, drooling, sensory tolerance, speech clarity), that is worth a proper look. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online form. If oral-motor or sensory comfort is the question behind the question, our occupational therapy team can help, and you can read more on the Sports Mouth Guard Set page.

Trusted sources

Guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org supports protective mouthwear for children in contact sports and advises a dental check where teeth are still erupting or braces are worn.

Next step — Unsure whether your child's mouth comfort is about kit or about development? Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

Check the guard does not make your child gag, drool heavily or struggle to breathe during play; refit or seek a dental opinion if it slips, feels loose, or your child has braces or wobbly milk teeth.

Try this at home

Rinse the guard in cool water and let it air-dry in its case after every game — and re-mould a boil-and-bite guard as new teeth come through so it always fits snugly.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Is a Sports Mouth Guard Set a therapy or developmental tool?

No. It is everyday protective sports equipment that cushions the teeth, lips and jaw during contact sports. It does not treat or support development. If your real concern is oral-motor skill, drooling, chewing or sensory comfort, that is worth a developmental check rather than a mouth guard.

What age can my child start using a mouth guard?

There is no fixed age — it depends on the sport and on your child having teeth to protect. Once front teeth are well established and your child plays a contact or fast-ball sport, a comfortable, well-fitted guard is sensible. Ask a dentist if your child has loose milk teeth or braces.

My child hates things in their mouth. Should I still try a mouth guard?

Introduce it gently and only if your child can wear it comfortably without gagging or struggling to breathe. Strong mouth sensitivity can be part of broader sensory differences. If it is a regular pattern across eating and teeth-brushing too, an occupational therapy assessment can help.

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