Know the Difference

Jaw Locked Open vs. Locked Closed: What's the Difference?

People use "jaw locking" to describe two genuinely different problems. Knowing which one you have changes how urgently you need care.

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"My jaw is locked" could mean two very different things, and mixing them up matters — one is a same-day medical situation, the other usually isn't.

Locked closed (the common one)

This is what most people mean by TMJ "locking." The small disc that cushions the joint slips out of its normal position and doesn't return properly, physically blocking full movement. This limits how wide you can open your mouth — sometimes a little, sometimes a lot — but your mouth still closes normally. It's often accompanied by clicking, popping, or pain, and can range from a temporary, self-resolving episode to a more persistent limitation. This is the type covered in our Lockjaw & Limited Opening program.

Locked open (less common, more urgent)

This is a true dislocation — the jaw joint (the condyle) has slipped completely out of its normal position, past a bony ridge it's supposed to stay behind. The mouth gets stuck wide open and can't close on its own. It can happen from a wide yawn, a long dental procedure, or laughing or biting into something large, especially in people with looser or more flexible jaw ligaments. Unlike closed lock, this one typically requires a trained professional to physically guide the joint back into place — it generally does not resolve by itself, and attempting to force it closed yourself risks injury.

How to tell which one you have

NOTE: If your jaw is stuck open and won't close, seek prompt care — an urgent care clinic, ER, or dentist/oral surgeon who can see you same-day. This isn't something to self-treat with jaw exercises. Closed lock that's new, severe, or not improving with gentle self-care is also worth getting evaluated rather than assuming it will resolve on its own.

For the underlying joint mechanism behind locking, see our explainer on TMJ disc displacement.