Picture of woman using a swab to clean her ears.

The American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS), your local hearing care professional, your grandmother and all the boxes of swabs in the drugstore agree: ear cleaning is unnecessary and ear cleaning with swabs is downright harmful. So follow the old saying: don’t put anything into your ear that is smaller than your elbow. These 5 compelling reasons should make you stop cleaning your ears for good:

1. Let Your Ears Clean Themselves as Nature Intended

Cerumen is the official, scientific term for ear wax. And while it may look disgusting, it’s actually a cleaning workhorse, especially formulated to protect your ears from environmental dust and debris that may try to get into your ear canals. Not only that, but without realizing it, you actually already help your ears clean themselves. As you talk, yawn or chew throughout the day, those actions gently move the soiled ear wax out of the ear canal. The only cleaning you need to do is to gently wash the expelled ear wax out of the opening during your shower.

When you try to use a swab, stick, key, fork, finger, chopstick or any other pointy object for ear wax removal, you actually reverse your ear’s cleaning process by pushing old ear wax back down into the canal where it can become impacted and cause hearing loss or infection.

2. The Health Benefits of Ear Wax

Although cerumen looks kinda gross, it’s actually an effective and therapeutic cleaning solution produced especially for your ears by special glands along the ear canal. In addition to effectively removing dust and crud out of your ear canal, this special ear wax formula guards your ears against viruses, bacteria, fungal infections. It can even repel insects! It also protects, moisturizes and lubricates the ear canal, keeping it healthy and supple.

Everybody’s ear wax recipe is determined by genetics, so no two people will have exactly the same type of ear wax. Nevertheless, ear wax is largely concocted out of long-chain fatty acids, enzymes, alcohols, cholesterol, sebum, sloughed off skin cells, and other chemicals in a balanced mixture that protects your ears. Healthy cerumen is also a little acidic—a feature that also discourages fungal and bacterial infection. Thank you ear wax fairies!

3. The Connection between Ear Cleaning and Hearing Loss

One of the reasons so many people walk around with some level of hearing loss without realizing it is actually aggressive ear wax removal. As you shove those swabs into your ear, old layers of ear wax get impacted further down into the ear canal, causing some hearing loss.

If you’re worried this may have happened to you, schedule an appointment with your hearing care professional for a hearing checkup to determine whether or not you have impacted ear wax that might be causing some amount of hearing loss. Impacted ear wax removal should only be done in the office and without any pointy objects like swabs.

To be fair, some people have ear wax production issues that need to be addressed with ear wax removal. Some people’s ears make cerumen that’s either too dry or too wet, so it doesn’t properly do its job. Some people make way too much ear wax while others don’t make enough. Even in these cases, however, you still need to avoid sticking swabs into your ears for ear wax removal. Call your hearing care professional if you’re worried about your ear wax.

A quick thought about hearing aids: If you wear hearing aids, you need to follow your hearing care professional’s hearing aid cleaning regimen and any ear washing regimen you’re instructed to follow. This will help preserve what natural hearing you still have while also keeping your hearing aids performing at their best.

4. Ear Injuries from Ear Cleaning

Nearly 12,500 American kids a year have to go to the doctor with ear wax removal injuries. Unfortunately, these injuries can negatively affect a child’s language and communication development if the ear cleaning injury results in hearing loss. The most common of these ear injuries include tympanic membrane tears (torn ear drum) or other small lacerations and cuts inside of the ear canal. Pass on what you have learned: never stick anything into your ear but your elbow (it’s cute when they try to stick their elbow in there).

And now, about ear candling for ear cleaning… just don’t. The person responsible for the idea of sticking a hollow cone into the ear and lighting it has been lost to history, which is just as well. It was never a good idea and can damage your hearing and cause other injuries too. Thousands of people experience ear candling injuries each year, and for what?

  • It’s been proven ineffective for ear cleaning and can actually make ear wax impaction worse.
  • It causes burn injuries to the face, ears, hair, etc. – even burns that go all the way to the ear drum and middle ear.
  • It’s also been known to puncture the ear drum.

So please – run away from ear candling.

5. A Gentle Wash is all Your Ears Need

All you need to do, really, is shower and wash your hair. Then just gently dab around your ears with a towel to sop up any excess water and you’re done. This will safely remove only the spent ear wax that your chewing, talking and yawning have evacuated from the ear canal.

Seriously – don’t pick up another swab! If not cleaning your ears the wrong way makes you feel awkward, or if you have any other concerns about ear wax impaction, ear injury or hearing loss, please schedule an appointment with your hearing care professional for an ear checkup today.

The site information is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. To receive personalized advice or treatment, schedule an appointment.
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