Painlessly shrink enlarged tonsils, eliminate chronic biofilm, and restore the airway — in 10–15 minute in-office sessions. No anesthesia. No hospital. No downtime. Safe and well tolerated by children and adults.
No general anesthesia — most patients feel mild warmth at most
10–15 minutes per session, same-day return to school or work
Preserves immune tissue that a tonsillectomy removes
Eliminates tonsil stones in adults
Surgery remains available if ever needed — nothing is lost by trying
Dr. Haller performing a CO2 laser tonsil session
10–15
minutes per session
3–6
sessions in a typical course
0
days of downtime
An alternative to tonsillectomy — not a replacement when surgery is needed
Laser treatment is a first-line option before surgery. If it doesn't achieve adequate reduction, surgery remains available and we'll help coordinate it with your ENT.
We treat the whole airway, not just the tonsils
Tonsils don't enlarge in isolation. Dr. Haller evaluates tongue posture, jaw development, nasal airway, and sleep — so results last.
Why do tonsils become — and stay — enlarged?
When children or adults have enlarged tonsils affecting their sleep, the first line of defense is usually antibiotics. If antibiotics stop working, the next recommendation is surgical removal. That eliminates the obstruction, but it requires general anesthesia and a hospital stay — and it doesn't address why the tonsils enlarged in the first place.
Mouth breathing exposes the tonsils to constant dirty, unfiltered air. That leads to infection which causes the tonsils to swell. Antibiotics often clear the infection — but repeated infection from chronic mouth breathing can lead to a bacterial biofilm that antibiotics cannot reach.
The problem
Mouth breathing is usually the underlying cause. The nose is designed to filter, humidify, and clean air before it reaches the tonsils. Mouth air — full of bacteria and allergens — hits the tonsil tissue directly.
Bacteria form a protective biofilm deep in tonsillar crypts, shielded from antibiotics and unreachable by the immune system.
The chronic immune response keeps tonsil tissue swollen and permanently enlarged.
A specialized CO2 laser attachment delivers targeted energy into tonsillar crypts.
The process — cryptolysis — eliminates chronic bacterial biofilm at its source.
Thermal energy reduces vascular engorgement and stimulates lymphatic drainage.
Tonsils measurably shrink as chronic inflammation resolves.
Shrinking the crypts also dislodges tonsil stones — calcified bacterial colonies that often pop out on their own or become much easier to remove.
For adults: a quick and painless fix for tonsil stones
Tonsil stones (tonsilloliths) are calcified bacterial colonies that form deep in the tonsillar crypts — the source of persistent bad breath, throat discomfort, and the “something stuck” sensation many adults learn to live with. Because the laser shrinks the crypts themselves, the stones lose the place they form in. Existing stones often pop out on their own during the treatment course, or become loose enough to remove easily. The same shrinkage that helps a child’s airway is what eliminates an adult’s tonsil stones.
Who benefits from laser tonsil treatment?
Enlarged tonsils are the #1 anatomical cause of pediatric sleep-disordered breathing. Restoring the airway often dramatically improves the sleep disorder.
Children who snore
Enlarged tonsils narrow the airway, causing turbulent airflow — the source of snoring. Tonsil reduction often resolves it without surgery.
Children labeled ADHD
Many children diagnosed with ADHD are actually experiencing chronic sleep deprivation from airway obstruction. For them, tonsil reduction can be transformative.
Recurrent tonsillitis
Repeated infections despite antibiotic courses is a sign of persistent biofilm that antibiotics can't eliminate. Laser decontamination reaches where antibiotics can't.
Chronic bad breath
Persistent halitosis despite good oral hygiene is a classic sign of bacterial biofilm in tonsillar crypts — the same crypts where tonsil stones form.
Grade 2–3 enlargement
Moderate to significantly enlarged tonsils respond best to laser treatment. Measurable shrinkage typically begins within days.
Grade 4 — worth trying first
“Kissing tonsils” may still benefit from a laser trial before committing to surgery. If it doesn't work, surgery remains an option.
The chain — what we address together
Enlarged tonsils are a downstream symptom. Treating them without understanding why they enlarged is treating the symptom, not the cause. Dr. Haller works through the chain of questions with every patient:
1
What is causing the tonsils to be swollen?
2
Is it mouth breathing?
3
Why doesn’t the patient breathe through the nose?
4
Allergies? Nasal obstruction from trauma or chronic infection? A leftover habit from a bad cold? Low tongue posture from an undetected tongue tie?
If allergies have been ruled out
Ways we restore nasal breathing
Nasal sprays
Steroid or saline sprays open up stuffed noses and sinuses as a first-line medical option.
Nasal strips or Mutes
Mechanical aids that help keep the nose physically open at night.
SONU headband
Uses natural sound waves to resonate with and clear clogged, congested sinuses.
Nasal Release Therapy (NRT)
A gentle in-office technique that physically widens the nasal passages and improves airflow.
Dental arch expansion
Widens the palate and nasal passages permanently — making nasal breathing the path of least resistance.
Tongue tie release
If a tongue tie is the underlying problem, we coordinate with myofunctional therapists before and after release. Dr. Haller has performed hundreds of releases.
What families are saying
Results, in patients’ own words
★★★★★
“My son’s tonsils were Grade 3 and his pediatrician wanted a surgical referral. After 4 laser sessions with Dr. Haller, they’re barely visible. No surgery, no hospital, no recovery time.”
Maria T. · Parent · Tonsil Laser Treatment
★★★★★
“My daughter had been snoring since she was three. After two sessions her snoring was noticeably better. By session five it was gone entirely. I wish we’d found Dr. Haller years earlier.”
James R. · Parent · Tonsil Laser Treatment
★★★★★
“I’d had bad breath for years despite brushing obsessively. Three laser sessions later it’s gone. Turns out it was bacterial biofilm in my tonsils the whole time. Simple, painless, life-changing.”
Angela M. · Adult · Recurrent Tonsillitis
A considered comparison
Laser decontamination vs. tonsillectomy
Surgery is a permanent, irreversible decision. Laser treatment preserves immune tissue, requires no hospital stay, and leaves surgical removal as an option if ever needed. Nothing is lost by trying laser first.
Laser cryptolysis
In-office — no hospital stay
No general anesthesia required
10–15 minutes per session
Same-day return to school or work
Preserves immune tissue
Surgery remains available if needed
3–6 sessions spaced out over weeks
vs.
Tonsillectomy
Hospital or surgery center
General anesthesia required
Weeks of recovery
Throat pain, possible bleeding risk
Permanently removes lymphoid tissue
Not reversible
One procedure
Frequently asked
Does laser treatment remove tonsil stones?
Tonsil stones are calcified deposits that form inside tonsillar crypts — the same folds where bacterial biofilm accumulates. They are not random. They are the direct result of bacterial colonies hardening over time inside the crypt pockets.
The same laser treatment that decontaminates the tonsils also eliminates the conditions that cause stone formation. As the tissue shrinks, stones are forced out. Most patients who complete a full laser course report complete resolution of tonsil stones.
Common symptoms of tonsil stones
Persistent bad breath despite good oral hygiene
Visible white or yellow spots on the tonsils
Foreign body sensation or throat tightness
Metallic taste in the mouth
Chronic sore throat or difficulty swallowing
Recurrent coughing or choking sensation
What if laser treatment isn’t enough?
Nothing is lost by trying. Surgery remains available — and we’ll help coordinate it if needed.
Laser decontamination does not burn bridges. If a full course of laser treatment does not achieve adequate tonsil reduction, surgical removal remains available. We provide a detailed clinical progress report — including before and after photographs and grade measurements — to any ENT you choose. In most cases, the laser course also confirms whether surgery is truly necessary.
This isn’t experimental
The research is clear
Laser tonsil cryptolysis has been studied extensively in the otolaryngology and biofilm literature. Here is what the published research shows.
500-case retrospective review
A retrospective review of 500 consecutive laser tonsil cryptolysis procedures found minimal complications, low conversion rate to surgery, and high patient satisfaction. The authors concluded it is a viable office-based alternative for cryptic tonsillitis and tonsilloliths.
American Journal of Otolaryngology · 2013
Biofilm architecture research
Research by Stoodley et al. confirmed that tonsil stones exhibit the same architecture and behavior as dental biofilms — anaerobic bacterial colonies that antibiotics cannot penetrate. This is why laser, not antibiotics, is the appropriate treatment.
Stoodley et al. · ScienceDirect
Halitosis resolution
Halitometry studies following CO2 laser cryptolysis showed a measurable 30% reduction in volatile sulfur compounds — the molecules responsible for bad breath — with complete resolution of halitosis in many patients.