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The gum is the easiest way to add daily training volume — a firm, sugar-free piece you chew in proper sets rather than idly. This is the long-form how-to: how to chew a set, how often to train, and when to move up a tier.
Shop the gumOpen and close your mouth a few times and move it gently side to side before you load it. A cold jaw does not need much, but a few easy movements get blood into the muscle.
Start with a single piece on one side of your jaw and chew with steady, deliberate pressure for around five minutes. This is a training set, not idle chewing — feel the masseter working.
Move the gum to the other side and chew for another five minutes. Training both sides evenly keeps your development symmetrical, which matters more than most people expect.
Aim for one to two sessions a day, most days of the week. A short daily set beats an occasional long one — consistency is what builds the muscle.
When a full session on your current tier stops feeling like work — usually after two to four weeks — move up a hardness level. Progression is what keeps the jaw adapting.
Jaw gum trains a real muscle, so treat it like any other training. Mild muscle fatigue after a set is normal and expected. Sharp jaw pain, clicking that gets worse, or a jaw that aches into the next morning are your cues to ease off — drop back a tier or take a rest day. Training should feel like effort, never injury. If you have a jaw condition, recent dental work, or any concern about chewing, check with your dentist before you start, and stop if discomfort persists.
Start on Hard if you are new — it challenges the muscle while still letting you finish a full set. Move to Ultra Hard once Hard feels easy, and reach for Hard + Caffeine when you want a lift with your morning sets (it matches the Hard firmness and simply adds caffeine, so keep your total daily caffeine in mind). There is no prize for chewing the hardest tier you can barely finish.
Keep the gum in its resealable pack, away from heat and direct sun so it holds its firmness. Each piece is single-use — bin it after a session rather than re-chewing a set that has lost its resistance. Buy a fresh pack when you run low so a missed session is never down to an empty tin.
Around five minutes per side, so roughly ten minutes a session. Consistency matters more than duration — a short daily set beats an occasional long one.
Yes, once you are established — one to two sessions a day is a sensible range. Watch for a tired or achy jaw and pull back the volume if you notice it.
It is sugar-free and designed to be gentle on teeth, so a daily habit does not come at the cost of your smile. If you have dental concerns, check with your dentist first.
Start on Hard for your first couple of weeks, then step up to Ultra Hard once a full set feels easy. Choose Hard + Caffeine for the caffeine, not for more resistance.