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The Margin The relatable reason why tooth fairy is leaving less money under the pillow these days Parents share their going exchange rate per tooth — which has dropped almost 50 cents.
Delta Dental's annual poll of parents reveals this week that the average amount the Tooth Fairy slips under the pillow in exchange for a child's lost tooth has climbed to $6.23 — a 16% jump!
Washington - Economic hard times are well and truly over if you're losing your baby teeth. Credit card brand Visa said that, according to a national survey, the Tooth Fairy - or parents acting ...
The Tooth Fairy is more generous than ever with $2.42 under the pillow (and it bodes well for the U.S. economy too) By MARGOT PEPPERS . Published: 12:09 EDT, 28 February 2013 | Updated: 12:09 EDT ...
Even the Tooth Fairy is not immune to jaw-dropping inflation. $20 for a first tooth has become popular across the country, with some parents going well beyond that.
David White, chief executive of the Children's Mutual, said tooth fairy inflation comes close to that of house prices which have leapt by more than 600 percent n the past 25 years.
A mum has gone viral after sharing how her seven-year-old son told her he wanted the tooth fairy to leave $200 (around £107) underneath his pillow when he lost one of his teeth ...
American families are said to have R25 visits from the Tooth Fairy. . . indicating the economy is on the up. . . Thursday, June 19, 2025. ... Tooth Fairy leaving more under the pillow.
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