Mewing is designed to improve mouth posture
What's Mewing?
Mewing, which involves pressing your tongue flat against the roof of your mouth, enhances breathing, oral posture, and facial appearance. It's popular online, especially for jawline sharpness, but there's little scientific evidence.
In the 1970s, British orthodontist Dr John Mew invented mewing, which includes resting the tongue on the palate instead of the bottom. It is designed to improve mouth posture, respiration, and jaw growth. It is popular on social media as a non-surgical facial enhancement.
Mewing Instructions
- On the roof of your mouth, place your entire tongue.
- Teeth position: Gently shut teeth.
- Keep lips locked.
- Hold for 20–30 seconds, multiple times daily.
Claimed Benefits
- Many web users claim sharper jawlines.
- Advocates claim it improves nasal breathing.
- Posture correction: Some say it aligns the head and neck.
- Orthodontic support: Originally for tooth and jaw alignment.
Risks and Limits
- There's no indication that mewing changes the jaw or face, say doctors.
- Incorrect practice can lead to jaw pain, speech difficulties, and misaligned teeth.
- Professional issues: Due to unusual methods, such as mewing, Dr. John Mew's dental license was revoked.
Why They Do It
- Many say it sharpens the jawline.
- Encourages nose breathing over mouth breathing.
- Posture: Aligns head and neck.
Important Note
Mewing is commonly debated online but lacks scientific evidence. It may improve mouth posture and respiration, but experts say it won't modify adult facial shape.
Mewing: nice or awful?
- Mewing can be good or negative depending on your expectations and practice.
Possible Benefits
- Better oral posture: Keeps tongue on palate, lips closed, and teeth barely touching.
- Increases nasal breathing, which is healthier than mouth breathing.
- Habit awareness: Improves posture and oral health.
- Jaw support: Correctly done can alleviate jaw and neck strain.
Possible Cons
- No scientific evidence that mewing changes adults' jawlines or faces.
- Jaw pain: Poor technique might cause jaw pain.
- Dental issues: Unnatural tongue or tooth placements can impact alignment.
- Unrealistic expectations: Online cosmetic alteration promises are usually anecdotal.
Balanced View:
- Promotes better oral posture. Forced tension can occur.
- Supports nasal breathing. No advantage over nasal breathing
- Improved jawline appearance. Unsupported by science
- Safe if gentle. Overuse can hurt.
Directions for Mewing
Get a step-by-step guide to mewing for safe and proper practice.
Step-by-step instructions
- Locate the palette.
- Place your tongue tip behind your top front teeth without touching them.
- The roof of your mouth should be in contact with the rest of your tongue.
- Flatten tongue
- Spread the tongue around the palate, not just the tip.
- Imagine slowly sucking your tongue up.
- Close teeth
- Keep your teeth close or gently touching.
- Avoid clenching—be natural and relaxed.
Keep lips sealed
- Tension-free lip closure.
- This technique promotes nasal breathing.
- Nasal breathing
- Maintain calm, steady nasal breathing while retaining the pose.
Hold steadily
- Try to keep this posture all day, not just during activities.
- Start slowly with 20–30 seconds and make it a habit.
Safe Practice Tips
- Avoid force: Push gently; it should feel natural.
- If jaw pain or strain occurs, stop.
- Small, frequent practice beats extended sessions.
What is Orthotropics?
- Definition: A branch of “facial growth guidance” that corrects mouth posture and breathing to influence face development.
- British orthodontist Dr. John Mew founded it, and his son Dr. Mike Mew continued it.
- Core idea: Orthotropics promotes jaw growth forward and upward, resulting in better face balance and airway health compared to braces.
How it works
- Kids should be taught to keep their teeth gently touching, their lips locked, and their tongue on the roof of their mouth.
- Forward jaw growth is encouraged by appliances such as the Biobloc.
- Supports airway development by encouraging nasal breathing.
- Timing: Best between 5–10, when facial bones are forming.
Controversy, Limitations
- Science: Few peer-reviewed studies; mostly anecdotes.
- Professional criticism: Orthodontists say it lacks evidence and is too sluggish compared to braces.
- Dr John Mew lost his orthodontic license for his unconventional procedures, yet still taught worldwide.
- Adult therapy is less successful since facial bones have grown.
Mewing exercise helps
Mewing exercises improve mouth posture and nasal respiration, but there is no scientific proof that they change the jawline or facial appearance. It can improve dental hygiene and airway health if done softly, but forcing it may hurt the jaw.
Potential Mewing Benefits
- Improved oral posture: lips closed, teeth lightly touching, and tongue positioned correctly.
- Nasal breathing: Reduces mouth breathing, improving airway health and dental health.
- Support for the jaw may alleviate muscle strain and enhance alignment.
- Habit awareness: Prevents open-mouth resting by encouraging oral posture awareness.
- Orthodontists think it may guide children's jaw development.
Limits and Risks
- Mewing does not impact adult jawline or facial shape, according to studies.
- Jaw pain: Forceful or incorrect practice might hurt the jaw, neck, or tongue.
- Dental issues: Unnatural tooth fusion might compromise alignment.
- False expectations: Online claims of spectacular transformations are unproven.
In a balanced view, consider the potential benefits and potential risks.
- Better oral posture. Forced tension can occur.
- Encourages nasal breathing. No advantage over nasal breathing
- Sharpened jawline. Unsupported by science
- Children's facial growth guidance. Weak evidence, disputed
- Adults' habit awareness has little structural consequence.
Does Mewing Work?
- Scientific research does not support mewing as a permanent way to alter the adult jawline or face. Experts agree it may improve mouth posture and nasal ventilation, but big cosmetic effects are primarily anecdotal.
- Research indicates that mewing does not significantly impact bone structure or tooth alignment in adults.
- Temporary effects: Photos may show a sharper jawline, but the effect is usually due to posture, lighting, or muscle involvement.
- Youngsters vs adults: Mewing may affect facial growth in youngsters with developing bones but not in adults.
Mewing side effects
While mewing is generally harmless when done softly, improper technique or over-forcing might lead to negative effects such as jaw pain, dental misalignment, breathing constriction, or TMJ conditions. Experts say mewing should never replace orthodontics.
Common Mewing Side Effects
- Jaw pain: Excessive tongue pushing or teeth clenching can strain jaw muscles.
- Pushing the tongue on front teeth may cause them to slip outward (“buck teeth”).
- Incorrect tongue placement too far back might partially block the airway, making breathing harder.
- Long-term inappropriate mewing can cause TMJ disease, causing jaw popping, pain, or difficulty chewing.
- Muscle stress from poor posture can induce headaches or facial pain.
- Speaking problems: An unnatural tongue posture may affect speech.
Mistakes That Cause Side Effects
- Only employing the tongue tip: Resting only the tongue tip on the palate.
- Instead of the palate, touch the front teeth.
- Clenching or grinding teeth damages enamel and causes pain.
- Intermittent mouth breathing and mewing lessen effectiveness and strain.
Conclusion
Mewing entails sealing the lips, lightly touching the teeth, and pressing the tongue against the roof of the mouth. Mewing is a posture and breathing awareness practice, not a facial beauty trick. Try lightly if you're inquisitive, but see an orthodontist or ENT professional for medical or cosmetic issues.








