Smile MonthBetween 11 May and 11 June 2026, the Oral Health Foundation will raise awareness of important oral health issues. Join the nation's biggest oral health campaign and help bring a smile to millions of people. This year is our biggest year yet as we get ready to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Smile Month, and we need your smiling faces to make it happen. Join our Smile Wall using the buttons below. See our online wall Add your smile There are lots of different activities you can take part in for Smile Month. Have a look at the full list here. Take part The Smile Wall About the campaign What is Smile Month? History of the campaign Why it matters today Who takes part 50 years of smiles The story of 50 years How smiles have changed Half a century of healthy smiles Our vision for the next 50 Why smiles matter Better oral health Confidence & wellbeing Social and life impact Everyday quality of life Who's behind it Oral Health Foundation Our sponsors Take part Activities For dental teams For schools & youth groups In workplaces For families and communities View all Downloads Logo & email signature Social media Digital guides Learning resources Facts and talking points For dental professionals (DCPs) Shop Fundraising Donate Set up your fundraising page Fundraising ideas Taking action Wall of Smiles Sign the Prevention Pledge Your oral health Daily habits Brushing basics Cleaning between teeth Why mouthwash matters Diet Diet and oral health Best tooth-friendly foods Foods and drinks to avoid The impact of sugar The role of hydration Children's teeth First teeth School years Teen habits Making brushing fun All ages Young adults Adults Older adults Changes to watch for Common mistakes Brushing too hard Rinsing with water Grazing all day Ignoring bleeding gums Oral Health Foundation Home Smile Month Prevention Pledge Good oral health is essential to our overall health, wellbeing and quality of life. For 50 years, Smile Month has helped people across the UK understand how to care for their mouths, make healthier choices and prevent avoidable disease. Over that time, oral health has improved significantly – but progress has not been shared equally. Too many people still experience the pain, discomfort and life impact of preventable oral disease. Too many communities face barriers to care, advice and support. And too often, the system still responds after problems have developed, rather than helping people stay healthy in the first place. The Smile Month Prevention Pledge is a commitment to change that. It supports the ambition set out in our report, Oral Health: From Treatment to Prevention, to build a future where prevention is placed at the heart of oral health policy, services, education and everyday life. Our Pledge I support the Smile Month Prevention Pledge and the ambition to improve oral health for the next generation. I believe that prevention, education and healthier habits are essential to creating a future where everyone has the opportunity to enjoy a healthy smile. I pledge to support action that helps: Put prevention at the centre of oral health policy and care. Reduce oral health inequalities. Improve access to trusted advice, support and services. Promote healthier diets and reduce the harm caused by sugar. Strengthen oral health education in schools, workplaces and communities. Support the full dental team to deliver preventive care. Improve public understanding of the links between oral health and general health. Build partnerships that make healthier choices easier for everyone. Why prevention matters Our report shows that the UK has made major progress in oral health over the last 50 years. Fluoride toothpaste, public health programmes, better clinical practice and campaigns like Smile Month have all helped reduce dental disease. But the report also makes clear that progress is fragile and uneven. Oral health inequalities remain a major challenge. Children and adults in deprived communities continue to face higher levels of disease, poorer access to care and worse outcomes. NHS dentistry is under pressure, while funding and delivery models still too often reward treatment more strongly than prevention. The challenge now is not whether prevention works. The challenge is building systems that consistently place prevention first. Sign the Pledge By signing the Smile Month Prevention Pledge, you are adding your voice to a shared call for a healthier, fairer and more prevention-focused future. I am committed to supporting prevention, education and healthier habits, and to helping improve oral health for the next generation. Sign the Prevention Pledge eea5d122-2792-4a5a-99f8-99100735c06e Manage Cookie Preferences