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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

what is the going rate of the tooth fairy?

86 replies

leelo · 01/08/2011 14:39

my daughter is 6 and needs to get 7, possibly 9 teeth taken out at hospital. and normally when she loses a tooth the fairy leaves her a £2 coin. with the prospect of this many coming out at once i wondered if there is current rate for teeth or special rates for lots at once. i have some time before she gets this done so can organise a 2nd mortgage.

OP posts:
valiumredhead · 01/08/2011 17:04

A pound coin here!

TalesOfTheUnexpected · 01/08/2011 17:08

£1 per tooth. Nothing more for multiple losses or bigger back teeth.

mummymeister · 01/08/2011 17:42

£1 for a single tooth and £2 for a double tooth. but of course we don't have to pay it because the fairy does!!!

Marne · 01/08/2011 17:43

£1 here

LikeACandleButNotQuite · 01/08/2011 17:49

I used to get £1 per tooth (early nineties child), though one time, near christmas I woke up and my loose tooth was gone. MY mam convinced me I must have swallowed it (bleurch!). I was devastated that I wouldn't get my pound. She suggested I write th Tooth Fairy a letter, explaining what had happened, which I put under my pillow. I woke up in the morning to find a lovely Christmas story book (which I still have) as a reward! What a treat - tooth fairy must have felt very pleased with my letter

MuddlingMackem · 01/08/2011 19:15

Here the tooth fairy leaves £2 for each of the four front teeth and £1 each thereafter. :)

leelo · 02/08/2011 15:26

she had heart defects at birth and due to medication she was given we were told that she would have problems with her teeth. since her first set came through they haven't been nice and the funny thing is she had a nutritionist from the hospital til she 2 and still doesn't eat sweets. only last month she tried and liked crisps so i know its not because she has nothing bar sugar in her diet. she eats 5 a day probly more and drinks loads of water so it is very annoying to have to go into hospital again for another thing. dentist we saw to assess problem gave us the bad parent look until she read her history then suddenly became nice and less judgemental.

OP posts:
InTheNightKitchen · 02/08/2011 15:43

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coff33pot · 02/08/2011 15:45

£2 coin here too. Multipul teeth get a fiver.

HairyBeaver · 02/08/2011 15:59

£1 here, my DS who's 6, will be having 4 teeth out in 2 weeks due to being on lots of antibiotics as a baby. That's what the dentist said anyway, had no idea that being poorly (bronchitis,sp,twice and numerous chest infections and really bad ear infections pretty much monthly til gromits were fitted at 2 years old) would cause this, his front teeth also came through a browny colour and have already been told that he will need braces when his older, and he hasnt even got his adult teeth yet Confused

flatbread · 02/08/2011 16:03

From CNN
edition.cnn.com/2011/LIVING/08/02/tooth.fairy.penny.pincher/

In this dire economy, even the Tooth Fairy is pinching pennies

(CNN) -- Getting the Tooth Fairy to pony up in this sagging economy has been like pulling teeth.

A recent survey found that the national going rate has seen a 40-cent decline this year: From $3 to $2.60.

What's worse? A full 10% of kids are reaching under their pillows ... and coming up empty. Compare that to last year when just 6% of kids found no reason to flash that toothless grin.

"It's a cardinal sin not to (pay)," said Rakshanda Liaqat, a mother of two in Phoenix. "It's about a child losing a part of her and the warm belief that the tooth fairy will take care of her precious tooth."

"Now, on the other hand, counting the number of teeth your kid loses. And that, too, multiple times in a year? And that, too, having two kids? I can understand the economic recession the Tooth Fairy goes through in terms of her salary."

Liaqat tried to leave $10 for every tooth her son lost -- "but my son didn't lose much of his teeth after the recession hit."

"He lost it right on time. Before the debt crisis," she said. "Amen to that!!"

The telephone survey of 1,006 adults was conducted on behalf of Visa and is intended to get parents talking to kids about money management.

It found that the economic pinch has taken a bite out of the Tooth Fairy's generosity most dramatically in the eastern United States. Kids there received just $2.10 -- a 38% decline from $3.40 last year.

In the West, kids pocket more than the national average: $2.80 and up 4% from last year's $2.70.

That doesn't surprise Scott Rivers in San Diego.

He leaves about $5 for every tooth his children lose.

"It's worth it just to see their eyes light up," he said. "Plus, it gives us a chance to talk about what they want to do with the money and what they should. Like donating a bit to charity."

But he's in the minority. Just 18% of kids around the nation receive $5, the survey found.

The majority 36% receive a dollar or less.

And 18% get between $2 and $4.

"My 6-year-old niece just lost her first tooth last week and her parents gave her about $2 in coins," said Jeanne Byrd of Fairfield, California. " Our family has never really given large dollars for the tooth fairy though."

Among the survey's other findings:

-- Kids in the Midwest receive an average of $2.80, a 3% decrease from last year's $2.90

But children in the South find the Tooth Fairy penny-pinching as well: $2.60 a 21% cut from last year's $3.30.

CNN's Maria P. White contributed to this report.

altinkum · 02/08/2011 16:07

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nocake · 02/08/2011 16:18

The tooth fairy has a FAQ on her website.

TalkinPeace2 · 02/08/2011 16:43

50p

tinkbig · 02/08/2011 16:58

i havent had to give any money yet my dd1 is 6 and hasher first wobbly tooth
i think that £1 atooth soundsfair
how about u give her £10

juicychops · 02/08/2011 17:39

£1 here. some of ds's friends wonder why he gets £1 when they only get 50p.

my sis and i used to get £1 so thats what ds will get per tooth. really it should be more with inflation...

bigbluebus · 02/08/2011 17:50

Sorry your DD has to have so many teeth out due to medication given when she was younger. My DD also had 5 baby teeth extracted when she was younger as they had no enamel on them. We were also told it was due to medicines she had been given - probably ones for her epilepsy. My DD has never eaten sweets as she has Special needs and only ate pureed diet! I also had one tooth at the front which crumbled as it had no enamel on it and was told by dentist it was probably caused by antibiotics.
Hope the op isn't too traumatic for you all.
Going rate here was always £1 per tooth but might be nice to give your DD a small special present from tooth fairy instead as she has to go to hospital!

pinkgirlythoughts · 02/08/2011 19:20

The going rate for kids in my class seems to be about a fiver, although sometimes the girls are given special jewellery instead of money. It's also not unusual for the tooth fairy to provide a hand-written letter introducing herself, congratulating the child on how wonderful their teeth are (Hmm), and explaining what she plans to do with the newly-acquired tooth.

Poweredbypepsi · 02/08/2011 19:24

£2 here so that its enough to buy a treat like a magazine.

californiaburrito · 02/08/2011 19:32

I had 8 teeth removed when I was a bit older than your DD. I got a nice present rather than cash money. Is there something that she'd like? It's one thing to lose a tooth, but another to have a bunch of them extracted at once....

Hope she's OK and it doesn't cause too much discomfort.

AllYourCakeAreBelongToMe · 02/08/2011 20:11

50p here. DS thought all his Christmases had come at once when he had to have two baby teeth pulled as they weren't coming out on their own, and got a whole pound as a result Grin

HSMM · 02/08/2011 20:12

50p for little teeth and £1 for big teeth here. After losing about 6, my DD wrote to the tooth fairy and asked for her teeth back! Tooth fairy replied that luckily she had not yet used the teeth, so here they are and she would let DD know if she ever needed the money back Grin.

Having a load out at hospital .... hmmm .... depends why? If it's because of too many sweets, then low rates, if it's something medical, then maybe a bonus rate?

upahill · 02/08/2011 20:13

£3.50

EcoLady · 02/08/2011 20:17

£1 each here.

Loopymumsy · 02/08/2011 20:17

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