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Tooth Chart & Dental Chart Numbering Explained

Instantly convert between FDI (ISO 3950), Universal (ADA), and Palmer notation systems. Click on any tooth or enter a number to see all equivalent notations.

Upper Right / Upper Left
181
172
163
154
145
136
127
118
|
219
2210
2311
2412
2513
2614
2715
2816
Lower Right / Lower Left
4832
4731
4630
4529
4428
4327
4226
4125
|
3124
3223
3322
3421
3520
3619
3718
3817
Conversion Results
FDI (ISO 3950)
-
Universal (ADA)
-
Palmer Notation
-

What Is a Tooth Numbering Chart? The Three Systems

A tooth chart, or dental chart, is a standardized map of the mouth that gives every tooth a unique label, so clinicians anywhere can record findings without ambiguity. An adult mouth holds 32 permanent teeth, and three numbering systems are in everyday use to identify them.

The Universal Numbering System (ADA) numbers the permanent teeth 1 to 32. Tooth number 1 is the upper-right third molar (a wisdom tooth); the count runs across the upper arch to number 16 at the upper left, drops to number 17 at the lower-left third molar, and continues to number 32 at the lower right. It is the standard in the United States.

The FDI World Dental Federation notation (ISO 3950) uses a two-digit code in which the first digit names the quadrant and the second gives the tooth's position from the midline. Palmer notation instead pairs a number, 1 to 8, with a quadrant bracket symbol. All three systems describe exactly the same teeth.

The Primary Teeth Chart (Baby Teeth)

Children have 20 primary teeth, also called deciduous or baby teeth, so the primary teeth chart uses its own set of labels. In the Universal system these teeth are given letters, A through T, rather than the numbers used for permanent teeth.

Letter A is the upper-right second primary molar; the sequence runs across the upper arch to J at the upper left, then continues from K at the lower-left second molar around to T at the lower right. Each quadrant contains five primary teeth: a central incisor, a lateral incisor, a canine, a first molar, and a second molar.

FDI extends its two-digit logic to primary teeth using the quadrant digits 5 to 8: 51 to 55 for the upper right, 61 to 65 for the upper left, 71 to 75 for the lower left, and 81 to 85 for the lower right. Palmer notation labels these teeth A to E within each quadrant.

How to Read Teeth Chart Numbers by Quadrant

Every numbering system divides the mouth into four quadrants: upper right, upper left, lower left, and lower right. These are defined from the patient's own perspective, so the patient's right side appears on the viewer's left when you face them.

In FDI notation the first digit fixes the quadrant: 1 is upper right, 2 is upper left, 3 is lower left, and 4 is lower right for permanent teeth, with 5 to 8 covering the same quadrants for primary teeth. The second digit counts outward from the midline: 1 is the central incisor, 2 the lateral incisor, 3 the canine, 4 and 5 the premolars, and 6 to 8 the molars. So FDI 11 is the upper-right central incisor and 48 is the lower-right third molar.

Universal numbers instead follow one continuous path from 1 to 32 rather than restarting in each quadrant, which is why numbers 8 and 9 fall on the two upper central incisors. Once you know the pattern, you can translate any teeth chart number at a glance.

Using a Dental Chart in Daily Practice

Accurate charting underpins the clinical record. Fillings, extractions, crowns, root canals, and periodontal findings are all logged against a specific tooth number, and a consistent notation prevents serious errors such as treating the wrong tooth.

Because colleagues, referral partners, and insurers may each prefer a different system, being able to convert between Universal, FDI, and Palmer keeps notes readable across teams and borders. The converter above maps any tooth across all three notations instantly, which is useful when reading records written elsewhere.

Modern practice software builds the chart directly into the patient record: DenPro includes an interactive odontogram, so a clinician can click a tooth and attach its treatment history to it. That keeps the tooth chart, the patient notes, and the clinical history together in one place.

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