
Veneers and crown lengthening are two different solutions to two different problems. Choosing the wrong one wastes time and money — and may not fix what is actually bothering you. This guide breaks down exactly when each option works and how to figure out which fits your situation.
Crown lengthening removes excess gum tissue to reveal more of the natural tooth. It changes the position of your gumline.
Veneers cover the visible surface of the tooth. They change the color, shape, or length of the tooth itself. They do not touch the gums.
If your gummy smile is caused by excess gum tissue, veneers will not fix it. If your teeth are already properly proportioned but discolored or chipped, crown lengthening is unnecessary.
A gummy smile is one where more gum tissue than tooth shows when you smile fully. Most people show 1 to 2 mm of gum above the front teeth. Showing 3 mm or more is generally considered a gummy smile.
But not all gummy smiles have the same cause. That distinction drives everything:
What You See | Most Likely Cause | Right Treatment |
|---|---|---|
Short teeth, lots of gum showing | Excess gum tissue covering the crown | Crown lengthening |
Normal gum height, but teeth look small | Teeth that haven’t fully erupted | Crown lengthening |
Gums are fine, teeth are discolored or misshapen | Tooth surface issue | Veneers |
Lots of gum shows when smiling hard | Hypermobile upper lip | Injectable treatment or lip repositioning |
Teeth look short and are also crooked or misaligned | Bite or eruption issue | Orthodontics first, then evaluate |
Crown lengthening works well when:
The procedure removes and reshapes gum tissue and, in some cases, a small amount of bone underneath. Results are permanent. Recovery takes 2 to 3 weeks before final results are visible.
Crown lengthening does not work if:
Veneers are thin porcelain shells bonded to the front surface of the tooth. They are the right choice when:
Veneers are not reversible. A small amount of enamel is removed before bonding, so the tooth will always need a veneer going forward. They last 10 to 20 years with proper care.
Veneers do not work if:
Yes, and it is common. Many patients who want a complete smile transformation start with crown lengthening to establish the right gumline, then add veneers once the tissue has fully healed (usually 3 to 6 months later).
Doing it in this order matters. If veneers are placed first and the gumline is corrected afterward, the veneers may no longer fit the new proportions correctly.
A few other treatments come up in gummy smile conversations:
Orthodontics: If your gummy smile is caused by teeth that have erupted too far down or a bite that needs correction, braces or aligners may be the first step before any cosmetic work.
Injectable treatment for hypermobile lip: Some patients show a lot of gum simply because their upper lip rises very high when they smile. This is a lip mobility issue, not a gum or tooth issue. A small amount of injectable can temporarily limit how far the lip rises. Results last several months.
Jaw surgery: In rare cases where the upper jaw itself is positioned too low, orthognathic surgery addresses the underlying structure. This is uncommon and only recommended when other options are not enough.
The only way to know for certain is a clinical evaluation. Dr. Livingston will:
This takes about 30 minutes and gives you a clear answer before anything is recommended.
Does insurance cover crown lengthening?
Insurance covers crown lengthening when it is done for functional reasons — preparing a tooth for a crown or filling. Cosmetic crown lengthening for a gummy smile is typically not covered.
How long does crown lengthening take to heal?
The tissue heals within 2 to 3 weeks. Final results — the settled gumline — are visible at about 3 months.
Do veneers hurt?
The process involves light numbing during enamel preparation. Most patients report little to no discomfort. Sensitivity in the first few days is common but temporary.
Can I fix a gummy smile without surgery?
If the cause is lip mobility, injectable treatment is a non-surgical option. If excess gum tissue is the cause, crown lengthening is a minor surgical procedure — but it is done in one visit under local anesthetic and recovery is straightforward.
Call (970) 221-2444 or book a consultation online. Dr. Livingston will take measurements and walk you through which option fits your specific situation — before anything is recommended or scheduled.

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