Tooth fairy finally feels the economic pinch
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Tooth fairy finally feels the economic pinch

Tooth fairy finally feels the economic pinch

For the first time in five years, the tooth fairy has had to tighten her belt. The average value of a single lost tooth in the U.S. in 2024 fell by about 6%, according to results from the Delta Dental Plans Association “2024 Original Tooth Fairy Poll.”

The average value of a lost tooth fell 37¢ from $6.23 to $5.84, which represents the first year-over-year decline in five years, according to a press release dated February 22.

New Delta Dental findings from its 2024 Original Tooth Fairy Poll revealed that the average value of a single lost tooth during the past year declined by 6% from $6.23 to $8.54. Image and caption courtesy of Delta Dental.New Delta Dental findings from its 2024 Original Tooth Fairy Poll revealed that the average value of a single lost tooth during the past year declined by 6% from $6.23 to $8.54. Image and caption courtesy of Delta Dental.

The penny pinching also has affected first-time tooth losers. The average value of a lost first tooth dipped from $7.29 in 2023 to $7.09 in 2024, according to the poll that was conducted in January among 1,000 parents of children ages 6 to 12.

Though the tooth fairy has gotten thrifty overall, there were some regional differences.

It seems that it’s good to be a kid living in the West, where the value of lost tooth soared 37% to $8.54. Children in the Northeast aren’t doing that well, but the average value of a lost tooth there was $6.87. This was a 12% increase from the prior year and still more than $1 higher than the average in the U.S., according to the results.

After leading in 2023 with a lost tooth worth $6.59, the average value in the South slipped below the U.S. average to $5.51 in 2024.

Nevertheless, Midwesterners took the biggest hit. At $3.63, it significantly trailed the U.S. average with a 36% drop and returned close to its 2021 average of $3.66, according to the results.

Like 2023, poll results in this year didn’t reflect the U.S. economy’s overall direction by tracking with the trends of S&P 500. Historically, they mirror each other.  Over the past year, the average value of a single lost tooth decreased 6% while the S&P 500 experienced a 20% increase during the same period, according to Delta Dental, which has tracked tooth gairy giving trends in the U.S. for more than a quarter century.

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