The Faculty of odontology at the Royal faculty of Surgeons, that compiled the information, blames caries connected to honeylike diets.
Figures show there have been nine,206 extractions allotted on youngsters aged four and younger between Apr 2015 and March 2016.
A decade agone, it absolutely was nearer to seven,400 extractions.
That is an increase of concerning pure gold within the area of a decade - over you'd expect from growth alone, says the school.
However, the full range of extractions for youngsters aged 9 or below fell slightly last year, from 34,788 extractions in 2014/15 to thirty four,003 in 2015/16.
Lead investigator professor Nigel Hunt said: "When you see the numbers tallied up like this, it becomes copiously clear that the sweet habits of our youngsters ar having a devastating impact on the state of their teeth.
"That youngsters as young jointly or 2 ought to have teeth extracted is surprising.
"What is actually distressing concerning these figures is that ninetieth of caries is preventable through reducing sugar consumption, regular brushing with halide dentifrice and routine dental visits.
"Despite NHS dental treatment being free for under-18s, forty second of youngsters didn't see a medical man in 2015-16."
Tooth decay is preventable - mostly by limiting honeylike food and drink and ensuring youngsters visit the medical man often, additionally as brush their teeth double daily with halide dentifrice.
Brush as shortly as your baby gets their initial tooth
Do it double daily - morning and night - for concerning 2 minutes
Use solely a smear of dentifrice if your kid is younger than 3. Use a pea-sized blob thenceforth
Make sure the dentifrice is lower-strength, containing one,000ppm halide
Public Health England is functioning with the food and drink trade to chop the number of sugar youngsters consume from common foods like breakfast cereals, yoghurts, biscuits and cakes.
A spokesperson from the Department of Health said: "These ar worrying statistics - that is why we have a tendency to ar taking action.
"We ar introducing a soft drinks levy, additionally as a broader sugar reduction programme, to encourage food and drink firms to scale back the number of sugar that's in well-liked product within the initial place."