Key takeaways
- Mouth breathing at night is common: around a quarter of children do it, and a dry mouth on waking affects an estimated 22% to 45% of adults with sleep apnoea.
- The nose does real work a mouth cannot: it filters and humidifies air and adds nitric oxide from the sinuses, which helps oxygen reach the blood.
- Mouth taping is not the fix the internet claims. A 2025 systematic review of 10 studies found limited benefit and possible harm, especially if your nose is blocked.
- Loud snoring, gasping or breathing pauses are red flags for sleep apnoea and need a GP, not a gadget. Sleep apnoea affects roughly 3% to 17% of adults.
Mouth breathing while you sleep has become a wellness obsession, with millions of videos pushing tape, devices and gadgets. Most of that content skips the part that matters: what the evidence actually shows, and when a dry mouth in the morning is harmless versus a sign of something that needs a doctor. This guide sticks to the research, with the sources listed at the end.
How common is night-time mouth breathing?
It is widespread. In one study of 661 children aged 6 to 12, about 27% were habitual mouth breathers. In adults it is hard to pin down because people do not see themselves sleep, but a dry mouth on waking, the most reliable clue, is reported by an estimated 22% to 45% of people with obstructive sleep apnoea, compared with around 20% of people without it. The percentage rises as sleep apnoea gets more severe.
Why does nose breathing matter?
Your nose is not just a backup airway. It filters dust and allergens, warms and humidifies the air before it reaches your lungs, and releases nitric oxide, a gas produced in the paranasal sinuses. Nitric oxide widens blood vessels and helps oxygen pass from the lungs into the blood, and it has mild antimicrobial effects. Breathing through the mouth bypasses all of this, which is part of why habitual mouth breathers often wake up dry, groggy and prone to a sore throat.
Is mouth breathing at night harmful?
An occasional night with a blocked nose is nothing to worry about. Night after night is different. Persistent mouth breathing dries the mouth and throat, which is linked to bad breath, more plaque and a higher risk of tooth decay and gum problems, and it tends to make sleep feel lighter and less refreshing. Just as importantly, it is often a symptom of something else, from hay fever to a deviated septum to sleep apnoea, so the goal is to find the cause rather than just force the mouth shut.
What causes it, and what to try first
| Common cause | First thing to try |
|---|---|
| Allergies or hay fever | A daily antihistamine and reducing allergens (bedding, dust, pets) |
| A cold or short-term congestion | Saline rinse, steam, a short course of a decongestant |
| Deviated septum or other structural issue | See a GP, who may refer you to an ENT specialist |
| Sleeping on your back | Try sleeping on your side |
| Habit, with a clear nose | Practise nose breathing in the day, then consider tape cautiously |
Does mouth taping actually work?
This is where most articles oversell. In 2025 researchers published a systematic review in PLOS One that pulled together 10 studies covering 233 people, from 1999 to 2024. The conclusion was blunt: the evidence does not support mouth taping as a safe or effective treatment for mouth breathing or sleep-disordered breathing in the general population, every one of the 10 studies was low quality, and for people with a blocked nose, forcing the mouth shut can actually reduce airflow and make things worse. Here is how the popular claims hold up.
| Claim you will see online | What the evidence says |
|---|---|
| It cures snoring | Not supported as a general fix |
| It treats sleep apnoea | Not supported, and potentially unsafe |
| It helps light, habitual mouth breathing | Possibly, but studies are few and low quality |
| It is safe for everyone | No. Risky with a blocked nose or untreated sleep apnoea |
None of that means tape never helps anyone. For a healthy adult who can breathe easily through the nose and simply slips into mouth breathing out of habit, it may nudge the right way. It is just not the cure-all it is sold as. If you do want to try it, our guide to the best mouth tape for sleeping covers the safer options and the rules.
Red flags: when it is more than a habit
Use this as a rough guide, not a diagnosis. If anything in the bottom three rows sounds like you, book a GP appointment.
| What you notice | What it may mean | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Dry mouth some mornings, nothing else | Simple or habitual mouth breathing | Nasal hygiene, side sleeping |
| Loud snoring most nights | Simple snoring or early sign of apnoea | Mention it to a GP if frequent |
| Gasping, choking or pauses in breathing | Possible obstructive sleep apnoea | See a GP, ask about a sleep study |
| Exhausted despite 7 to 8 hours | Possible apnoea or poor sleep quality | See a GP |
| Persistent in a child | Can affect sleep and development | See a GP or dentist |
How to breathe through your nose at night
Start with the nose itself. Treat allergies and congestion, keep the bedroom cool, aired and dust-light, and rinse with saline if you are bunged up. Side sleeping helps many people, because lying on your back lets the tongue and soft palate fall backwards. Build a consistent wind-down so your sleep is deeper overall, and if heat is the real culprit, our guide on how hot is too hot to sleep is the place to start. Only once your nose is genuinely clear is it worth experimenting with tape, and never if it is blocked.
Common questions
Is mouth breathing while sleeping actually bad?
Occasional mouth breathing is harmless. Doing it most nights dries the mouth and throat, is linked to worse dental health and bad breath, and often signals an underlying cause such as allergies or, in some cases, sleep apnoea. Between about 22% and 45% of people with sleep apnoea report a dry mouth on waking, far more than people without it.
Does mouth taping stop snoring or sleep apnoea?
The best current evidence says no. A 2025 systematic review of 10 studies found mouth taping offered limited benefit and could be unsafe for people with a blocked nose, and it is not a treatment for sleep apnoea. Treat loud snoring or breathing pauses as a reason to see a GP, not to buy tape.
Why is nose breathing better than mouth breathing?
The nose filters, warms and humidifies air, and it releases nitric oxide made in the sinuses, a gas that helps widen blood vessels and move oxygen into the blood. Mouth breathing skips all of that, which is why it can leave you drier and less rested.
How do I know if my mouth breathing is a problem?
A dry mouth some mornings with no other symptoms is usually simple, habitual breathing. Loud nightly snoring, gasping or choking, witnessed pauses in breathing, or feeling exhausted despite a full night are red flags that warrant a GP visit.
Can children grow out of mouth breathing?
Not always on their own. Roughly a quarter of children are habitual mouth breathers, and in studies a large share of those with persistent mouth breathing had obstructive sleep apnoea. Persistent mouth breathing in a child is worth raising with a GP or dentist.
Sources
- Yang D, et al. Safety and efficacy of mouth taping: a systematic review, PLOS One, 2025.
- NHS. Sleep apnoea.
- Cleveland Clinic. Nose breathing vs mouth breathing.
- Xerostomia (dry mouth) prevalence in sleep apnoea, prospective case-control study, PMC.
How we wrote this: we summarise peer-reviewed research and NHS guidance, linked above. It is general information, not medical advice. If you are worried about your sleep or breathing, speak to a GP.

