How much does a Whitening cost in Florida?
Underlined terms link to definitions in the Pearl Dental Glossary.
What is this procedure?
About this procedure
Professional teeth whitening uses concentrated peroxide gel to lift surface and deeper stains from the enamel. Two main delivery methods are common: in-office whitening (a single 60–90 minute session at the dental office) and take-home whitening (custom trays plus prescription-strength gel used over 1–2 weeks at home). Both achieve similar end results, though in-office is faster and take-home is usually cheaper.
Professional whitening is significantly stronger than over-the-counter whitening strips and trays, which use a much lower peroxide concentration. Results typically last 6 months to 2 years, depending on diet, smoking, and oral hygiene. Touch-up treatments every 6–12 months keep the result fresh.
Price factors
What affects the cost?
- Method (in-office laser vs. take-home trays vs. both)
- Number of sessions
- Whether custom trays are included
- Practice type (dental office vs. spa)
- Strength of bleaching agent used
By city
Cities we cover
Pearl has city-level pricing in these covered cities. Click a city to see local fee ranges, what affects the quote, and your estimated out-of-pocket.
Quote checker
What should your quote include?
Different offices bundle costs differently. Here's what a complete quote typically covers — and what's often left out.
Usually included in the quoted price
- Whitening agent and application
- Number of sessions included
- Take-home trays if provided
- Post-whitening sensitivity management
Often billed separately — ask before you agree
- Ask whether a touch-up kit is included
Health stakes
What happens if you delay treatment?
Restorative procedures are usually recommended once a tooth has lost too much structure to remain stable on its own. Waiting rarely makes the situation simpler.
- Surface stains become more embedded over time, requiring stronger treatments
- Active decay or gum disease should be treated before whitening — chemicals can damage exposed tissue
- Delaying means a less dramatic starting result
Before you agree
Questions to ask your dentist
A good dentist won't mind these. Print this list or take a photo before your next visit.
- Is this in-office whitening, take-home trays, or a combination?
- How many shades lighter can I realistically expect?
- Are my crowns or veneers going to be affected by whitening?
- Is sensitivity management included?
- How long will the results last?
- Will I need touch-ups, and how much do they cost?
Coverage
Insurance & coverage notes
Insurance coverage varies by procedure type. For Teeth Whitening, typical coverage tiers are: No Insurance $300 – $1,000, Basic Insurance Not typically covered, Major Insurance Not typically covered.
Common questions
Frequently asked questions
Is professional whitening better than over-the-counter strips?
Yes — professional whitening uses 25–40% peroxide, while over-the-counter strips use 5–10%. Professional results are faster, more dramatic, and usually more uniform. OTC strips work for mild discoloration but typically can't match professional outcomes.
Does insurance cover teeth whitening?
No — whitening is treated as cosmetic by all major dental insurance plans and isn't covered. The exception is internal whitening for a darkened root-canaled tooth, which some plans treat as restorative.
Will my teeth be sensitive afterward?
Most patients have some short-term sensitivity that resolves in 24–48 hours. Patients with existing sensitivity, gum recession, or worn enamel are more affected. Desensitizing toothpastes and lower-concentration touch-up gels reduce the issue.
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What does this cost in your city?
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