TL;DR: Black tartar is hardened dental plaque that has absorbed dark pigments from bleeding gums, foods, tobacco, or bacteria. It feels impossible to remove at home — and it is — but a quick professional cleaning eliminates it. The real concern is the gum disease that often lurks underneath. Here’s exactly what causes it, why DIY removal is dangerous, what your dentist will do, and how to keep it from coming back.

Understanding the Buildup
Spotting black, crusty deposits on your teeth is unsettling. But take a breath — it’s more common than you think, and it’s completely treatable.
Those dark spots are black tartar — the term for dental calculus that has been stained by substances in your mouth. It starts as soft dental plaque, a sticky film of bacteria, food particles, and saliva. When plaque isn’t brushed or flossed away within a few days, minerals from your saliva begin to harden it. This process, called mineralization, transforms the biofilm into a cement-like substance that bonds to your enamel.
Most importantly, black tartar almost always forms below the gumline. In that low-oxygen environment, the porous calculus absorbs pigments from bleeding gums, dark foods, and chromogenic bacteria — giving it that alarming color.
Why It Turns Black
Not all tartar is black. The tartar you feel along your gumline on the inside of your lower front teeth is often yellowish or white. But when deposits accumulate subgingivally (under the gum), the color story shifts dramatically.
The main reason? Iron from blood. If your gums bleed even slightly — a classic sign of gingivitis or early periodontal disease — hemoglobin seeps into the gum pocket. When hemoglobin breaks down, iron is released and oxidizes within the porous calculus, producing a black insoluble ferric compound. Research suggests that black staining is essentially an insoluble ferric salt precipitate.
But blood isn’t the only culprit. Other staining sources include:
- Chromogenic bacteria — Specific strains like Prevotella melaninogenica and certain Actinomyces species produce dark pigments as part of their metabolism. A 2023 narrative review confirmed that these bacteria can generate black, green, or orange discolorations on teeth.
- Tobacco use — Tar and nicotine stain plaque before it even hardens.
- Dark foods and drinks — Coffee, tea, red wine, and dark berries deposit tannins and chromogens.
- Iron supplements or well water — High-iron water or supplements can intensify the dark color.
You might also confuse black tartar with a black line stain, a superficial bacterial stain that appears right at the gumline, usually in people with good oral hygiene and a low cavity rate. Unlike actual calculus, black line stain hasn’t mineralized and can be polished off relatively easily. Real black tartar is stubborn and mineralized.
Why Home Removal Fails
It’s tempting to grab a dental pick or scrape the dark spots yourself. Don’t.
Once plaque has calcified into dental calculus, it adheres to the tooth surface through a layer of the acquired pellicle — and the bond is incredibly strong. According to recent reviews, calculus consists of calcium phosphate crystals like hydroxyapatite, and it integrates with the tooth at a microscopic level.
Using at-home tools creates three serious risks: - Gum laceration — Periodontal tissues are delicate. A slip leads to bleeding, infection, and recession. - Enamel scratching — Improper tools leave grooves where bacteria multiply even faster. - Incomplete removal — You might chip off the visible portion, but the dangerous subgingival deposits — the ones fueling bone loss — remain untouched.
Even more important: black tartar is often a sign of active periodontitis. The dark deposits hide inside periodontal pockets that are at least 4 mm deep. Only a professional can clean those areas safely and thoroughly.
The Professional Removal Process
The “gold standard” for eliminating black tartar is scaling and root planing (SRP). This non-surgical procedure mechanically removes tartar from both above and below the gumline, smoothing the root surfaces so bacteria have a harder time reattaching. An evidence-based clinical guideline developed by the American Dental Association recommends SRP as the initial nonsurgical treatment for chronic periodontitis.
What to expect during the appointment:
- Assessment — Your dentist or hygienist will measure gum pocket depths and may use X-rays to check for bone loss.
- Ultrasonic scaling — A water-cooled tip vibrates at high frequency to blast away heavy deposits. You’ll feel a mild buzzing and hear a soft humming sound.
- Hand instrumentation — Fine curettes gently scrape below the gumline to remove any remaining tartar and smooth root surfaces.
- Multiple visits — If black tartar is widespread, your clinician may split treatment into quadrants, sometimes using local anesthesia to keep you comfortable.
Many patients worry about pain. The reality: mild discomfort is common, but ask your hygienist about numbing options if you’re nervous. Afterward, you might have some temporary sensitivity because tartar was insulating exposed tooth roots. Using a desensitizing toothpaste usually resolves this within a few days.

Preventing a Comeback
Once your teeth are tartar-free, keeping them that way relies on one simple truth: plaque never solidifies if you remove it daily.
The Core Trio
- Brush for two full minutes, twice a day. An electric toothbrush removes significantly more plaque than a manual brush, especially along the gumline where black tartar likes to lurk. Pay attention to the inner surfaces of your lower front teeth — a prime spot for rapid buildup.
- Floss or use interdental brushes. Plaque hiding between teeth solidifies quickly. Slide floss gently below the gumline in a C-shape.
- Rinse with an antibacterial mouthwash. A formula containing cetylpyridinium chloride or essential oils can reduce plaque bacteria. However, be cautious with long-term chlorhexidine, which can contribute to staining.
Targeted Lifestyle Shifts
- Quit smoking or chewing tobacco. Tobacco stains plaque and slows gum healing, making it a double threat.
- Manage gum bleeding. Bleeding gums feed the iron-based color cycle. Improved oral hygiene alone often stops bleeding within one to two weeks.
- Stay hydrated. Saliva neutralizes acids and helps control bacterial growth. A dry mouth accelerates plaque mineralization.
Professional Maintenance
The final layer of prevention is consistent periodontal maintenance — a deeper cleaning scheduled every 3–6 months if you’ve had black tartar and gum disease. This goes beyond a routine prophylaxis and actively monitors pocket depths to catch recurrence early.
Consider a power toothbrush as part of your maintenance toolkit. It makes it easier to consistently clean near the gum margins and around crowded teeth, extending the results of your professional cleanings and keeping new black deposits at bay.
Next Steps
Black tartar looks alarming, but it’s a solvable problem with a clear path forward:
- Book a dental exam — even if you have no pain. The deeper the deposits, the greater the risk of permanent bone loss and gum recession.
- Undergo scaling and root planing — this isn’t just cosmetic; it treats the underlying infection.
- Commit to daily plaque control — your brush, floss, and rinse routine is the only thing standing between you and a repeat buildup.
Remember, black tartar doesn’t define your oral health. Early professional care removes it completely in most cases. What matters is that you act now — because the same deposits that create that dark color are slowly damaging the foundation your teeth depend on.










