Teeth Whitening Cost in Bangalore — Full Breakdown
- In-clinic professional whitening (single session): ₹4,000 – ₹12,000
- Laser/LED-assisted in-clinic whitening: ₹6,000 – ₹15,000
- Take-home custom tray kit (from clinic): ₹2,500 – ₹6,000
- Combination (in-clinic + take-home maintenance): ₹8,000 – ₹18,000
- OTC whitening strips (pharmacy): ₹800 – ₹2,500 — lower concentration, less effective
- Whitening toothpaste: ₹150 – ₹600 — removes surface stains only, no actual whitening
- Porcelain veneers (when whitening isn't enough): ₹12,000 – ₹25,000 per tooth
- Composite veneers (lower cost): ₹4,000 – ₹8,000 per tooth
How Does Professional Teeth Whitening Work?
Professional whitening uses hydrogen peroxide or carbamide peroxide at concentrations of 25–40% — far higher than anything available OTC. The peroxide molecules penetrate enamel and break apart the pigmented molecules (chromogens) that cause discolouration. In-clinic sessions use a custom-fitted tray or direct gel application, often with a light source to accelerate the reaction.
A single in-clinic session at Tooth Priority takes approximately 30–45 minutes and produces immediately visible results — typically 3–8 shades lighter, depending on starting colour and stain type.
What Causes Tooth Discolouration?
Extrinsic Stains (surface — whitening works best on these)
- Coffee, tea, and red wine — the most common culprits in Bangalore's coffee-heavy culture
- Tobacco (smoking or chewing)
- Dark-coloured foods (berries, curries, soy sauce)
- Poor oral hygiene allowing tartar buildup
Intrinsic Stains (inside the tooth — whitening has limited effect)
- Tetracycline antibiotics taken during childhood (creates grey/brown banding)
- Dental fluorosis (white spots or brown patches from excess fluoride during development)
- Trauma that caused internal bleeding in the tooth
- Natural tooth colour — some teeth are naturally more yellow than others, regardless of hygiene
| Important: Whitening does not work on dental crowns, veneers, or tooth-coloured fillings. These retain their existing colour while natural teeth whiten, which can create obvious colour mismatches. Plan any restorative work AFTER whitening, not before. |
How Long Does Professional Whitening Last?
In-clinic professional whitening typically lasts 1–3 years, depending on diet and habits. The main factors that reduce longevity are: daily coffee/tea consumption without post-consumption rinsing, smoking, and skipping maintenance top-ups. Most dentists recommend a take-home maintenance kit for monthly or quarterly touch-ups.
Smile Design vs Teeth Whitening — When Whitening Isn't Enough
Whitening changes colour. Smile design changes everything: colour, shape, size, proportion, gum symmetry, and the relationship between teeth and facial features. If your concern is only discolouration and your teeth are well-shaped and properly aligned, whitening is the right starting point. If you have chips, cracks, uneven shapes, significant gaps, or heavily intrinsic staining, smile design with veneers will give you results whitening never could.
Tooth Priority's smile design process includes a digital preview — you see what your result could look like before any irreversible treatment begins. This is the right way to approach cosmetic treatment.
Is Teeth Whitening Safe?
Professional whitening supervised by a dentist is safe. Temporary sensitivity (lasting 24–72 hours) is the most common side effect — it is normal and resolves without treatment. Whitening should be avoided during pregnancy and in children under 16. Existing dental decay or gum disease must be treated before whitening — applying bleaching agents over unhealthy teeth causes problems.
At-home kits from dentists (custom trays with professional-grade gel) are safe. Generic OTC strips are lower risk but also lower efficacy. 'Natural' alternatives like activated charcoal are mildly abrasive and can damage enamel with regular use without meaningful whitening effect.
How to Make Whitening Results Last Longer
- Rinse your mouth with water immediately after coffee, tea, or wine
- Use a straw for dark beverages when possible
- Brush before bed — overnight is when staining compounds do the most damage
- Use a fluoride toothpaste with mild whitening properties for maintenance
- Do a take-home top-up every 6–12 months
- Get professional scaling done every 6 months — tartar holds stains
- Avoid smoking — tobacco staining penetrates deeply and re-stains faster than anything else
Book a Whitening Consultation at Tooth Priority — See Results Same Day → +91-9901759011
FAQs
Can I whiten my teeth if I have sensitive teeth?
A: Yes, with precautions. Use a desensitising toothpaste (containing potassium nitrate or arginine) for 2 weeks before whitening. Your dentist can also apply a desensitising gel before and after the procedure. Sensitivity from whitening is temporary.
How many sessions does it take?
A: Most patients achieve satisfactory results in a single in-clinic session. Significantly stained teeth (tobacco, heavy coffee) may benefit from a second session 2–4 weeks later.
Can I whiten my teeth at home safely?
Yes — using a take-home kit prescribed by your dentist with custom trays. This is safer and more effective than generic OTC products because the tray fits perfectly (preventing gel contact with gums) and the gel concentration is appropriate.
Is laser whitening better than regular whitening?
The light/laser source accelerates the chemical reaction but does not fundamentally change the final result. For most patients, the difference in end result between LED-assisted and non-assisted whitening is modest. The gel concentration and application time matter more.