Braces Timeline: How Long Do Braces Take? A Complete Guide
The most common question Dr. Mark Nalbandian hears at the start of braces treatment at Wired Orthodontics is not how much braces cost. It is how long treatment takes. Specifically: how long do you have to wear braces, and is that timeline fixed or can anything change it? The answer involves your specific bite, the type of correction needed, and a few patient-controlled factors that genuinely move the finish line. This guide gives you the real numbers and the context to understand where your case likely sits.
The Short Answer: Average Braces Treatment Times
| Case Type | Typical Treatment Length | Common in This Group |
|---|---|---|
| Mild crowding or spacing | 12 to 18 months | Adults correcting minor relapse |
| Moderate crowding or spacing | 18 to 24 months | Teens, most common range |
| Significant crowding | 24 to 28 months | Adolescents with later starts |
| Bite correction (overbite, underbite) | 24 to 30 months | Children and teens with growth |
| Complex multi-factor cases | 30+ months | Surgical or skeletal cases |
According to research on orthodontic treatment duration published in PMC, the average comprehensive fixed appliance treatment runs approximately 20 months, though this varies considerably based on diagnosis complexity and patient compliance. That aligns closely with what most patients at Wired Orthodontics experience.
What Actually Determines Your Timeline
Case complexity
The single biggest factor. Straightening mildly crowded teeth and correcting a significant overbite alongside severe crowding are not the same procedure. More tooth movement, more bite correction, and more stages of wire progression all add months. Your treatment length is primarily a reflection of what your teeth and bite actually require to reach a stable, healthy end result.
Age and bone density
Teeth move more readily through the bone during adolescence because the bone is less dense and more responsive to orthodontic forces. Adult patients, particularly those over 30, may find teeth move slightly more slowly. This is rarely dramatic but is a real factor in longer adult treatment timelines.
Compliance
For patients wearing elastics, this is the most controllable variable in your timeline. Elastics apply the bite-correcting force that braces alone cannot generate. Wearing them as instructed keeps treatment on schedule. Skipping them consistently adds months because the bite correction simply does not happen on time.
Appointment attendance
Adjustment appointments are what advance the wire progression that moves your teeth. Missing appointments, or rescheduling them weeks later than planned, delays the sequence and extends your overall timeline. Each visit matters.
Oral hygiene
Poor hygiene around brackets can cause decalcification, gum issues, or the need to pause treatment for dental intervention. Keeping teeth and brackets clean is not just about health during treatment. It is about not adding unplanned time to your total duration.
The patient-controlled portion: Most patients cannot change their case complexity, their age, or their bone density. But elastics wear, appointment consistency, and oral hygiene are entirely within your control. These three factors together can mean the difference between finishing on the shorter or longer end of your estimated range.
The Month-by-Month Braces Timeline
Months 1 to 3: Alignment phase
Initial levelling and alignment of the teeth within each arch. Light, flexible wires are used to begin moving teeth into better positions. Soreness peaks in the first week and eases significantly by the end of month one. Most patients see visible movement of overlapping or rotated teeth within this period.
Months 3 to 9: Consolidation
Stiffer wires begin moving teeth more precisely. Gaps close, rotations are corrected, and the arches begin taking shape. Elastics are introduced in this phase for most patients with bite correction needs. Regular adjustments every six to eight weeks keep the progression on track.
Months 9 to 18: Bite correction
The bulk of the overbite, underbite, or crossbite correction happens in this phase. It is also where compliance matters most. Consistent elastic wear during this stage is what delivers the bite changes that make braces treatment functional as well as cosmetic. The detailed month-by-month braces progress guide at Wired Orthodontics shows what tooth movement typically looks like at each stage.
Months 18 to 24+: Finishing
Fine detail adjustments to tooth positions, bite relationships, and midline alignment. Wires may be bent to achieve very specific tooth positions. This phase is slower but critical for the long-term stability and quality of the result. Rushing finishing produces unstable results that relapse faster.
Completion: Debond and retention
Brackets are removed, teeth are polished, and retainers are fitted the same day. Retention is not optional. Without consistent retainer wear after treatment, teeth drift back, and the time spent in braces is gradually undone.
Braces vs. Invisalign: Does One Take Less Time?
For mild to moderate cases, the timelines are comparable. For complex bite corrections and severe crowding, traditional braces often complete faster because they apply continuous force without depending on patient compliance with wearing trays. The full breakdown of braces vs. Invisalign treatment time at Wired Orthodontics covers the clinical differences in detail so you can make an informed decision before choosing a treatment path.
Get Your Personal Timeline at Wired Orthodontics
How long do you have to wear braces specifically for your teeth? That is a question only a clinical examination can answer accurately. Patients seeking braces in Toronto and the Scarborough area can book a consultation with Dr. Mark Nalbandian at Wired Orthodontics to receive a personalized treatment plan with a realistic timeline and full cost breakdown before committing to anything.
Address: 3137 Sheppard Ave E Unit 108, Scarborough, ON M1T 3J7, Canada
Phone: (647) 344-9473
Email: info@wiredorthodontics.ca
Book Your Free Braces Consultation at Wired Orthodontics
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do you have to wear braces on average?
Most patients wear braces for 18 to 24 months. Simple cases can finish in 12 to 18 months. Complex bite corrections and significant crowding often require 24 to 30 months. Your specific timeline is confirmed at the consultation after Dr. Nalbandian assesses your teeth and bite.
What makes treatment take longer than expected?
The most common reasons treatment runs longer than estimated are inconsistent elastic wear, missed adjustment appointments, dental issues that require a treatment pause, and bone that responds more slowly than average to orthodontic forces. All but the last of these are largely within patient control.
Can I get braces in Toronto if I am an adult? Will it take longer?
Adults in the Scarborough and Toronto area are treated regularly at Wired Orthodontics. Adult treatment may be slightly longer than teen treatment due to denser bone, but the difference is typically modest. Most adult cases fall in the 18 to 24 month range.
Is there anything that can speed up braces treatment?
Consistent elastic wear, keeping all scheduled appointments, and maintaining excellent oral hygiene are the most reliable ways to stay on the shorter end of your estimated range. Orthodontic accelerator devices such as Propel or Acceledent are also available at some practices and can reduce treatment time for eligible patients.
What happens if I stop wearing my retainer after braces?
Teeth shift back toward their original positions over time without retainer wear. The front teeth, particularly the lower incisors, are the most prone to relapse. Even partial relapse after completing braces treatment can require re-treatment to correct. Retainers should be worn as directed indefinitely.
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