
For years you thought people were pulling away from you. They were pulling away from something you couldn't see.
The half-step back in conversation. The turned cheek. It's easy to take it personally — and just as easy to miss the real reason. Something quiet, and fixable, just below the gumline.
THE HIDDEN CAUSE
Why it always comes back minutes after brushing
Bad breath that survives brushing isn't on the surface. It comes from anaerobic bacteria packed into the pockets between tooth and gum — sealed away from mouthwash and bristles. You clean what you can reach. The problem is where you can't.
Why Oralvia is different
It doesn't mask the smell. It goes where the smell is made.
Brush it onto the gumline
The applicator places the gel exactly where rinses run off.
GK2 targets the bacteria
Licorice-derived GK2, studied for reducing P. gingivalis — the bacteria behind the odor.
Gums calm, odor fades at the source
As inflammation settles, the smell stops being remade every few minutes.
WHAT'S REALLY AT STAKE
The breath is the alarm. The damage runs deeper.
The same bacteria slowly wear away the bone and tissue holding your teeth in place — quietly, without pain. The good news: now you know where to look, and you have something that reaches it.
How to use it
Thirty seconds, twice a day

1. Twist the pen until gel reaches the tip.

2. Brush a thin line along the gumline.

3. Leave it. No rinsing. Morning and night.
vs everything you've tried
Why the others kept failing
What to expect
This works at the source — so give it time
It isn't a mask that hits in seconds. It calms the cause, in this order:
Days 1–3 · You start
Gums may feel a little less tender already.
First week · Bleeding settles
Many notice tender, bleeding gums calming within days.
Weeks 1–2 · Breath improves
As bacteria are reduced, the smell stops being remade.
Keep going · It holds
Steady use keeps you ahead — and lets you lean in without second-guessing.
Is this for you?
Honest about who it helps
The science
The ingredient that sets it apart
A licorice-root extract studied for reducing P. gingivalis, a key bacterium in periodontal pockets and a source of the sulfur compounds behind chronic bad breath.
Read the studyOhara K. et al. Dipotassium glycyrrhizate prevents oral dysbiosis caused by Porphyromonas gingivalis in an in vitro saliva-derived polymicrobial biofilm model. ScienceDirect, 2024.