I want to write this carefully, because I know how much parents in our situation read reviews like this and how much it matters that they're honest.
My son Eli is six. He has sensory processing difficulties — not a formal autism diagnosis, but significant sensory sensitivities that affect his daily life and ours. One of the most persistent challenges has been oral sensory seeking: Eli chews. He chews his clothing, his pencils, his fingers, the straps of his school bag. It's not a behaviour problem — it's a sensory need. His mouth is looking for input that his nervous system requires, and when he doesn't have an appropriate outlet for that, he finds one.
We'd been through a lot of chew toys before we found this one. Most of them were fine — food-grade silicone, safe, appropriate. But they were passive. Eli would use them for a few minutes and then put them down and go back to chewing his collar. The sensory input they provided wasn't quite enough to satisfy the need.
His occupational therapist mentioned vibrating oral tools as something worth trying. The vibration adds a layer of sensory input that a standard chew toy doesn't provide — it stimulates the mouth, gums, and jaw in a way that can be more satisfying for children with oral sensory seeking behaviours. I started looking for something that combined chewing with vibration, and found the LoveHugs Vibrating Sensory Chew Toy.
What I Was Looking For
After months of trial and error, I had a clear list of what I needed:
- Vibration that actually works. Some products marketed as vibrating produce a vibration so faint it's barely perceptible. I needed something with enough intensity to provide meaningful sensory input.
- Food-grade, safe materials. Non-negotiable. No BPA, no phthalates, no latex. Eli is going to put this in his mouth for extended periods.
- Rechargeable rather than battery-powered. Battery compartments on toys that go in children's mouths are a hygiene and safety concern. USB charging eliminates that problem.
- Durable enough to withstand actual chewing. Some chew toys are designed for light use. Eli is a determined chewer. I needed something that would hold up.
- Easy to clean. It goes in his mouth. It needs to be washable.
Why I Chose the LoveHugs Vibrating Sensory Chew Toy
The LoveHugs Vibrating Sensory Chew Toy addressed every item on my list:
- Three vibration settings. Not one fixed vibration, but three settings that can be adjusted to suit the child's preferences. This matters because sensory needs vary — what's calming for one child might be overstimulating for another. The ability to adjust the intensity means you can find the right level for your child.
- USB rechargeable. No battery compartment. Charges via USB like a phone. This was a significant practical advantage over battery-powered alternatives.
- Food-grade silicone, no BPA, no phthalates, no latex. Fully safety tested. LoveHugs is a UK brand and their products comply with European toy safety standards.
- Water resistant and easy to clean. Can be wiped down or rinsed. For something that goes in a child's mouth multiple times a day, this is essential.
- Dual purpose design. Effective as both a sensory chew toy for children with oral sensory needs and as a teething toy for babies and toddlers. The vibration helps with both use cases.
What Happened When Eli Used It
I want to be honest about the first few days. Eli was curious about it but cautious — new things can be difficult for children with sensory sensitivities, and a toy that vibrates is a new sensory experience. He explored it on his own terms, holding it and feeling the vibration before putting it in his mouth. By the third day, he was using it willingly.
By the end of the first week, I noticed something I hadn't expected: he was chewing his collar less. Not never — but less. The vibrating chew toy was providing enough oral sensory input that the need to seek it elsewhere was reduced. That was the outcome I'd been hoping for but hadn't been confident I'd get.
His occupational therapist was pleased when I reported back. She noted that the vibration component was doing what it's supposed to do — providing more intense and satisfying oral sensory input than a passive chew toy, which reduces the drive to seek that input from inappropriate sources.
Four Months Later
We've been using this for four months. A few things I can report:
- It has held up to daily use. Eli uses it every day, sometimes multiple times. The silicone shows no signs of degradation, tearing, or damage. It's as intact as it was when we received it.
- The vibration mechanism still works. Four months of daily use and the motor is functioning exactly as it did on day one. The USB charging takes about an hour and the charge lasts for several sessions.
- The three settings are genuinely useful. Eli uses different settings at different times — the lower setting when he's calm and just needs a little input, the higher setting when he's more dysregulated. Having that flexibility has been more useful than I expected.
- It's become part of our routine. It goes in his school bag. It comes out during homework time, which is when he tends to need the most oral sensory support. It's become a tool we rely on rather than something we tried once.
- His collar-chewing has reduced significantly. I can't attribute this entirely to the chew toy — we've made other changes to his routine and environment as well — but the correlation is clear and his OT agrees that the oral sensory tool is contributing.
A Note for Parents of Teething Babies
The LoveHugs Vibrating Sensory Chew Toy is also designed as a teething toy for babies and toddlers. The vibration helps increase circulation to the gums, which can reduce swelling and provide soothing comfort during teething. If you're looking for a teething toy rather than a sensory tool, the same qualities that make it effective for sensory needs — the vibration, the safe materials, the durability, the USB charging — make it a genuinely good teething toy as well.
What I'd Tell Another Parent
If your child has oral sensory seeking behaviours and you've tried standard chew toys without much success, the vibration component is worth trying. It provides a qualitatively different kind of sensory input — more intense, more engaging — that can be more effective at meeting the sensory need.
I can't promise it will work for every child. Sensory needs are individual and what works for Eli might not work for your child. But it worked for us, it's well-made, it's safe, and it's become one of the most useful tools in our daily routine. That's the honest account.
Where to Find It
The LoveHugs Vibrating Sensory Chew Toy is available directly from the store. You'll find it in our Teething Toys collection, within the broader Baby Activity Toys range and our Baby Toys & Activity Equipment department. Everything is also browsable across the Baby & Toddler section and the full catalogue.
For any parent navigating sensory needs: I hope this helps. You're doing a good job.
— Rachel Thornton, mum to Eli and advocate for finding what actually works
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