When Self-Care Isn't Enough

Is TMJ Surgery Ever Necessary?

Rarely — and that's genuinely reassuring news if you're worried a diagnosis is heading toward the operating table.

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Surgery sits at the very end of the TMD treatment spectrum, not the beginning — and the vast majority of people never get anywhere near it.

When surgery is actually considered

Surgery is generally reserved for cases with real structural damage — joint degeneration from arthritis, injury-related damage, or significant disc displacement — that hasn't improved with conservative treatment: physical therapy, splints or night guards, medication, and lifestyle changes. It's not something offered as a first option, and most providers will want to see months of conservative treatment tried first.

Types of TMJ surgery, from least to most invasive

Why most people never reach this point

The large majority of TMD is muscle- and habit-driven rather than structural, and responds well to the same conservative approaches covered throughout this site: posture correction, targeted stretching, trigger point release, and addressing clenching habits. Surgery is a tool for a specific, less common category of TMD — not the expected trajectory for most people managing symptoms.

If you're earlier in this process, our exercise programs represent exactly the kind of conservative first-line care that resolves the situation for most people before surgery is ever on the table.

Before surgery, it's worth discussing less invasive options with a specialist, including prolotherapy and, for treatment-resistant osteoarthritis pain, the emerging TMJ embolization procedure.