You've taken your impressions, approved your 3D treatment plan, and your first set of clear aligners has arrived at your door. It's an exciting moment — but also a moment that comes with a lot of questions. Will they hurt? Will people notice? Can I still eat normally?
The honest answer: your first week is an adjustment period. Your mouth is adapting to something it has never experienced before — gentle, sustained pressure designed to shift your teeth into a straighter position. That adaptation is completely normal, and it does get easier.
When you open your Smile Perfect aligner package, you'll find your complete set of numbered aligners along with your free whitening kit, retainers, and a handy removal tool. Start by washing your hands thoroughly, then locate Tray 1 (or Tray 1 Upper and Tray 1 Lower if you're treating both arches).
Place the aligner over your front teeth first, then gently press it down over your back teeth using your fingertips — never bite them into place, as this can warp the plastic. The fit should feel snug, almost like the tray is gripping your teeth. That tightness is intentional — it means the aligner is already applying the gentle pressure that will guide your teeth toward their new position.
What you'll feel: A noticeable tightness across your teeth, particularly around any areas of crowding or misalignment. This is the pressure doing its job. You may also feel a slight "fullness" in your mouth — the sensation of having a foreign object between your teeth and lips. Most people describe it as odd rather than painful.
Speech: Don't panic if you notice a slight lisp when you first speak. Your tongue is adjusting to the extra thickness of the plastic. For most people, this resolves within 24–48 hours. Speaking out loud, reading aloud, or singing along to music can help speed this up.
Start wearing your first set in the evening. This way, you'll sleep through the initial hours of tightness, and your mouth will have already begun adjusting by the time you wake up.
For most new aligner wearers, days two and three are when the pressure sensation peaks. This is completely expected. Your teeth are beginning the micro-movements mapped out in your treatment plan, and the periodontal ligaments around each tooth are responding to the new force being applied.
What's happening biologically: Clear aligners work by applying controlled force to specific teeth. That force creates a response in the bone surrounding each tooth root — the bone gradually remodels, allowing the tooth to shift into its new position. During these first few days, that remodelling process is in its most active early stage, which is why the pressure feels strongest.
Soreness and tenderness: Your teeth may feel tender when you bite down — especially when eating harder foods. This is a sign that the aligners are working, not a sign that anything is wrong. Think of it like mild muscle soreness after a good workout. It's uncomfortable, but it's productive.
Saliva production: You may notice your mouth producing more saliva than usual. This is your body's natural response to a new object in your mouth and typically settles down within a few days.
By now, the initial pressure has significantly reduced. Your teeth are settling into the position this tray is guiding them toward, and the tightness you felt on day one has softened into something far more manageable — or even barely noticeable.
This is the point where your daily routine with aligners starts to feel intuitive. The remove-eat-brush-reinsert cycle that felt awkward on day one now flows naturally. You've already developed muscle memory for popping the trays in and out, and the slight lisp from earlier in the week has either disappeared or become barely perceptible.
What to focus on now:
By the end of your first week, most people describe their aligners as feeling like "part of their mouth." The foreign-object sensation has gone. The pressure is minimal or absent. Eating and reinserting the trays is second nature.
You may even find that your teeth feel slightly strange without the aligners in — as if something is missing. That's a good sign. It means your mouth has fully adapted to the trays.
Looking ahead: When you switch to your next tray (typically every 1–2 weeks, as directed in your treatment plan), you'll experience a return of that initial tightness — but it will be less intense than what you felt on day one, and you'll already know what to expect. Each new tray is a step closer to your final result.
You've made it through the hardest part. Every tray after this one gets easier, and the discomfort window shrinks. Most Smile Perfect patients see their full treatment completed in under 6 months for Day-Time plans and 2–3 months for the Fast Track plan.
One of the most common worries during the first week is whether what you're feeling is normal. Here's a quick reference to help you tell the difference between productive discomfort and something that might need professional attention.
If you're ever unsure, reach out. Every Smile Perfect package includes free video consultations with a dentist — so you're never navigating uncertainty alone. You can also track your progress and upload photos directly through the Smile Perfect customer portal.
Nutrition & LifestyleOne of the biggest advantages of clear aligners over traditional braces is that they're removable — which means there's no permanent restriction on what you can eat. That said, your first week does come with some practical adjustments worth knowing about.
By mid-week, most people are eating normally again. The tenderness subsides quickly, and from your second week onward, your diet won't need any modifications at all.
Aligner MaintenanceGood hygiene habits established in your first week will carry you through the entire treatment. The good news: keeping your aligners clean is straightforward and takes under two minutes.
Morning and evening: Remove your aligners, rinse them under lukewarm water (never hot — heat warps the plastic), and gently brush them with a soft-bristle toothbrush. Avoid toothpaste, as many contain micro-abrasives that can scratch the surface and create a cloudy appearance over time. A drop of clear, unscented antibacterial soap works well.
Every time you remove them: Give the trays a quick rinse before putting them back in. This prevents saliva from drying on the surface and turning into visible buildup.
Your teeth: Brush and floss before every reinsertion. This is non-negotiable — especially during the first week, when you're still building the habit. If you're out and can't brush, rinse your mouth thoroughly with water before putting the aligners back in, and brush properly as soon as you get home.
Don't soak aligners in mouthwash. Many mouthwashes contain dyes that will tint the clear plastic. Stick to plain water or a dedicated aligner cleaning solution.
Don't leave aligners in the open air. When they're not in your mouth, store them in your aligner case. Leaving them on a table or wrapped in a napkin exposes them to bacteria — and dramatically increases the chance of losing them.
Don't use hot water. Even warm-to-hot tap water can distort the shape of your trays, making them fit incorrectly.
These tips come from thousands of Smile Perfect patients who've been through the exact same first week you're experiencing right now.
Smile Perfect is designed so that you're never alone during treatment. Your package includes free video consultations with a dentist, and the clinical team actively monitors your progress through the customer portal and app. That said, there are specific situations during your first week where it's worth reaching out proactively.
Email: hello@smileperfect.us
Phone: 801-898-1600
Customer Portal: patients.smileperfect.us
Customer service is available Monday–Friday, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm CST, with live chat available 24/7.
For those who want even closer clinical oversight — including a dedicated dental monitoring system and additional refinement support — the Smile Perfect Premium plan adds advanced digital monitoring with more frequent check-ins from your dental team.
Common Questions"Hurt" is a strong word — most people describe the sensation as tightness or pressure rather than pain. This is the aligner applying controlled force to guide your teeth into new positions. The discomfort is typically strongest on days 1–3 and fades significantly by the end of the week. If you experience sharp, worsening pain that doesn't improve after 48 hours, contact your dental team.
For Day-Time plans, the recommended wear time is 20–22 hours per day. They should only come out for eating, drinking anything other than water, and brushing. For Night-Time plans, the wear time is 10–12 hours nightly. Consistent wear is the most important factor in keeping your treatment on schedule.
In the vast majority of cases, no. Smile Perfect aligners are made from virtually invisible, BPA-free, medical-grade polymer. They fit flush against your teeth and are designed to be as discreet as possible. Most patients report that friends, colleagues, and even close family members don't notice them at all unless they're specifically told.
It's best to remove your aligners before drinking anything other than plain, room-temperature or cold water. Hot beverages can warp the plastic, and coffee, tea, and coloured drinks can stain the trays. Remove them, enjoy your drink, rinse your mouth, and pop them back in.
A slight lisp during the first 24–48 hours is very common and completely temporary. Your tongue is adjusting to the presence of the aligner material between your teeth. Speaking out loud — reading, chatting, singing — helps your tongue adapt faster. By day two or three, the lisp has usually resolved entirely.
A snug fit is exactly what you want — it means the aligner is applying the correct pressure to move your teeth. However, if a tray absolutely will not seat over your teeth despite gentle, sustained pressure, or if you notice a visible gap between the tray and the tooth surface, contact your dental team. The Smile Perfect package includes free refinements and a satisfaction guarantee, so adjustments are always available.
Use the aligner removal tool included in your Smile Perfect package. Start from the back molars on one side, gently lifting the edge of the tray with the tool, then work your way to the other side. Avoid pulling from the front, as this puts unnecessary stress on the plastic. With a bit of practice, removal becomes effortless within the first few days.
Smile Perfect treatment starts at just $549 for a single-arch plan, with dual-arch plans starting at $599. Every package includes a complete set of custom aligners, a teeth whitening kit, two sets of retainers, free shipping, and video consultations with a dentist. Flexible payment plans are also available through Affirm. See the full pricing breakdown.
Take the free assessment, preview your results in 3D, and only pay when you're happy with the projection. Starting at just $549 — everything included.