Brighton Beach Bathing Boxes

Test Listing 1

Best Overall: GLO Science Deluxe Teeth Whitening Device
It combines the easy comfortability of being at home while giving you the clinical level result with its LED light.

Best Budget: Crest 3D White Whitestrips
Their ‘no slip’ grip allows you to drink liquids during sessions without having to worry about your treatment being compromised.

Best for Sensitive: Zimba Teeth Whitening Strips
The best product for anyone with sensitive teeth and gums.

Best Kit: AURAGLOW Teeth Whitening Kit
This LED powered gadget is chock full of all the bells and whistles you would expect in kits double and triple the price.

Best Pen: AURAGLOW Teeth Whitening Pen
The gel dries quickly—in just 60 seconds—and is safe enough to use twice daily.

Best Peroxide-Free: Oralgen NuPearl Whitening System at Bed Bath & Beyond
This whitening system complete with a whitening pen relies on natural botanicals activated by NuBright LED Technology.

Best Toothpaste: Opalescence Whitening Toothpaste
This toothpaste is gentle enough to be used daily and will whiten up to two shades brighter.

Best Strips: Spotlight Oral Care Dental Teeth Whitening Strips
A much gentler type of teeth whitening treatment, it promises a more gradual but irritation-free whitening process.

While teeth whitening is considered safe, you may experience some side effects from treatments: Teeth sensitivity. Your teeth may become more sensitive following teeth whitening. You may experience this on your first or second treatment, and it may diminish with time.

According to a national Australian dental fee survey conducted in 2017, a take-home teeth whitening kit (119 x 2 and 926 x 2) can cost up to $610. In-chair bleaching (118) can cost up to $260 per tooth, in addition to the complementary consultation and plaque removal (015 and 118), which can cost up to $280.

H2 - Main Keyword + Suburb

Website: 123
Email: 123@123
Address: 123
Phone: 123

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged.

 

Play Video
Scroll to Top