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Why Using a Q-Tip to Clean Your Ears Is a Safety Hazard

You may have been taught to clean your ears with a Q-tip or cotton swab — and even enjoy how satisfying it can be — but Q-tips aren’t the safest method and can actually harm your ears. After all, earwax is essential to your ear health, so it’s not something you want to remove entirely.
To help you quit Q-tips and prevent hearing loss, we outline safer methods below. Your ears will thank you.
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The problem with Q-tips
The cotton swab, also known as the Q-tip, is the most common device used for cleaning your ears. But their shortcomings highlight the fundamental problem with using these kinds of instruments for earwax removal.
Because of their long, narrow shape, Q-tips are more likely to push earwax deeper into your ear than remove it. Using one to clean your ear canal can compact the wax instead, creating a blockage that makes it harder to hear.
Worse still, if you push a Q-tip too hard or too far into your ear canal, you may actually puncture your eardrum. The ear canal is only about an inch (2.5 centimeters) deep, so there’s not a lot of margin for error. One ear, nose and throat specialist CNET previously spoke with has treated patients who seriously damaged their eardrums by answering the phone with a Q-tip still in their ear. That’s a phone call that can truly ruin your day.
In general, it’s best to use cotton swabs — or even just a tissue or damp, clean rag — to clean the outer portion of your ear, outside the canal.
How to safely clean your ears
As gross as we may think it is, earwax is actually essential to your ear health. According to Harvard Medical School, not only does it lubricate your ear canal and protect your eardrum, but it also has antibacterial and antifungal properties. It naturally protects against harmful buildup, gathering dead skin cells and dirt as it gradually moves toward your outer ear on its own.
In other words, earwax makes your ears naturally self-cleaning. In most cases, you don’t need to dig into your ear canals or do anything to clean them out — they’ll do the job on their own.
Some people produce more earwax than others, and this can cause excessive buildup, leading to discomfort or hearing trouble. Hearing aid wearers, in particular, can suffer from excessive earwax buildup caused by the extra vibrations in their ears. Whatever the cause, if earwax is getting to you, it’s important to see a doctor and assess the best course of treatment.
If your doctor gives the thumbs-up, there are a few DIY ear-cleaning methods that can be done safely and effectively:
Wipe with a damp washcloth: This is the safest and best method of all. You can’t really get inside your ear canal with your finger, and gently rubbing around the outside of it with a damp cloth is usually sufficient to clear out any earwax buildup.
Rinse your ear canal: If you think you may have some earwax stubbornly lodged in your ear canal, you can often rinse it out, per Harvard Medical School. Soak a cotton ball in warm water, a saline solution, mineral oil or hydrogen peroxide, then hold it over your ear canal and tilt your opposite ear toward the floor. After you let it drip in and soak into the wax for a minute or so, tilt your head the other way and let the softened wax drip out.
Try over-the-counter ear drops: These drops serve much the same function of

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