Does your child really need a tongue tie release?
Most tongue ties don't actually need surgery. Get a therapy-first evaluation from licensed speech-language pathologist Kelsey Timler, M.S., CCC-SLP before you commit to a frenectomy.
Surgery is sometimes necessary. It's rarely the first answer.
Many parents come to Speech EZ already told their child needs a frenectomy. Sometimes that's true. Often, it isn't.
A real tongue tie evaluation isn't about how the tongue looks — it's about whether the restriction is actually limiting function. Feeding, speech, breathing, swallowing. We assess all of it. And in most cases, targeted myofunctional therapy resolves the symptoms — without surgery.
A clearer picture of your options
Therapy alone often resolves it when:
- The restriction is mild and tongue still has functional range of motion
- Speech sound errors respond to articulation work
- Symptoms are primarily postural (open mouth, tongue resting low)
- Mealtimes are slow but not failing — child gets adequate nutrition
- Sleep and breathing improve with myofunctional exercises
- Parents are willing to commit to consistent home practice
In our practice, most cases land here. Therapy first means avoiding an irreversible procedure when it isn't needed.
A release may be necessary when:
- Severe restriction with little or no tongue mobility
- Infant cannot latch or feed adequately despite intervention
- Persistent failure-to-thrive related to feeding
- Therapy plateaus after a sustained, well-executed treatment block
- Pain or dental complications are documented
- An ENT or pediatric dentist confirms structural restriction post-evaluation
When a release is the right call, we provide pre-release prep therapy and post-release exercises to ensure the best long-term outcome.
Tongue tie symptoms by age
👶 Infants (0–12 months)
- Difficulty latching during breastfeeding
- Long, painful, or frustrating feeds
- Poor weight gain despite frequent feeding
- Clicking sounds while nursing
- Reflux, gassiness, or excessive spit-up
🧒 Toddlers & kids (1–10 years)
- Persistent /t/, /d/, /l/, /n/, /s/, /z/ errors
- Open-mouth resting posture or mouth breathing
- Difficulty managing certain food textures
- Snoring or restless sleep
- Tongue thrust or reverse swallow patterns
🧑 Teens & adults
- TMJ pain or jaw tension
- Chronic mouth breathing or poor sleep
- Speech clarity issues that linger from childhood
- Tongue posture issues complicating orthodontic work
- Difficulty cleaning teeth with the tongue
Should you book an evaluation?
Answer 7 quick questions to see how strong the functional signals are. Not a diagnosis — just a clearer next step.
"We were told our daughter needed a tongue tie release. Speech EZ worked with us on therapy first, and she improved so much that surgery wasn't even necessary. So grateful for this approach."
Jessica R.
Parent of a 5-year-old
Tongue Tie FAQ
Get clarity before surgery.
A free 15-minute discovery call with Kelsey is the simplest first step. No pressure — just an honest conversation about what your child actually needs.