Mouth Tape
Mouth Taping Benefits: 9 Evidence-Backed Reasons People Sleep With Their Mouths Closed
What does mouth taping actually do? Nine real benefits — from quieter snoring to less morning dry mouth — plus who should not try it.
The short answer
Mouth taping forces nasal-only breathing during sleep, which reduces snoring, eliminates morning dry mouth, lowers nighttime cortisol, supports better tooth and gum health, and may improve deep sleep. It's safe for healthy adults whose nose is clear — never tape with a cold or untreated sleep apnoea.
1. Quieter snoring (often overnight)
Most adult snoring vibrations come from the soft palate behind an open mouth. Closing the mouth gently with tape eliminates that vibration source for the majority of mouth-breathers.
2. No more morning dry mouth
Eight hours of mouth-breathing dries the entire oral cavity. Nasal-only breathing keeps saliva flowing, so most tapers wake without that desert-mouth feeling within 1–2 nights.
3. Better dental and gum health
Saliva is your mouth's natural antibacterial system. Mouth-breathers have measurably higher rates of cavities, gingivitis and bad breath — restoring nasal breathing reverses this.
4. Lower nighttime cortisol
Nasal breathing engages the parasympathetic nervous system. Mouth breathers run higher cortisol overnight, which fragments deep sleep.
5. Higher overnight nitric oxide
Your sinuses produce nitric oxide, a vasodilator that improves oxygen uptake. You only get the benefit if you inhale through the nose.
6. Less morning sore throat
Dry, unfiltered air over the throat all night causes the classic 'sandpaper throat' on waking. Tape eliminates the cause, not the symptom.
7. More stable blood pressure
Nasal breathing is associated with lower nighttime BP than mouth breathing in observational studies.
8. Improved CPAP comfort (with doctor approval)
Some apnoea patients on nasal CPAP find tape stops mouth leak. This must only be done with a sleep physician's go-ahead.
9. Better-looking jawline over years
Chronic mouth breathing changes facial development in children and posture in adults. Restoring nasal breathing won't reshape your face overnight, but it stops the slow worsening.
Who should not tape
- Anyone with a head cold or blocked nose.
- Untreated sleep apnoea (treat the apnoea first).
- Severe nasal obstruction or deviated septum without ENT clearance.
- Children under 18.
- Anyone who's been drinking alcohol that night.
Ready to put this into practice?
RhinoGear nasal strips and gentle mouth tape are made in Australia, drug-free, and shipped from Robina, QLD with free delivery over $50.
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About this article
Written by the RhinoGear Editorial Team — sleep, breathing and recovery writers based in Robina, QLD. Every article is fact-checked against Australian therapeutic-goods guidance and current peer-reviewed literature on nasal breathing and sleep. RhinoGear products referenced are TGA-listed (ARTG 508285), drug-free and latex-free.
Published 14 May 2026 · Last updated 14 May 2026. This article is for general information only and is not medical advice. If you suspect sleep apnea or another medical condition, see your GP.
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