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Life Style / Wellness

The $100 tube of toothpaste is here

Published: 25 Sep 2019 - 06:25 pm | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 04:22 am
From left: Marvis Jasmin Mint; Aesop Toothpaste Dentifrice; Buly 1803 Orange Ginger Clove; Theodent 300.

From left: Marvis Jasmin Mint; Aesop Toothpaste Dentifrice; Buly 1803 Orange Ginger Clove; Theodent 300.

Claire Ballentine I Bloomberg

As with many beauty products in the world of luxury, it turns out that toothpaste isn’t really necessary.

Sure, it can freshen breath and help whiten teeth, but the real benefits of brushing come from the bristles on a toothbrush and their ability to scrape and disrupt dental plaque that leads to tooth decay and gum disease. Along with flossing once a day-arguably the most important-brushing twice daily is crucial to preventing oral infections, according to the American Dental Association.

One aspect of toothpaste that does make a difference though is fluoride, which combats the first stage of tooth decay, called demineralization. In that respect, if you’re not getting fluoride by some other means, toothpaste is your best bet.

"If a toothpaste doesn’t contain fluoride, I wouldn’t recommend it,” says Jessica Hilburg, associate professor of dental medicine at the Touro College of Dental Medicine.Most of the other aspects of toothpaste, including foaming agents, tasty flavorings, and bright packaging are just add-ons and could technically be eliminated, but what’s the fun in that? For a hygiene ritual so integral to your day, you might as well enjoy it.

The global toothpaste market was valued at $26 billion in 2018 and is expected to reach $36 billion by 2024, and a new crop of more decadent products is now carving out a share.

Packaging, Flavor

Last year, musician Lenny Kravitz helped launch Twice, a premium toothpaste with an Early Bird flavor (wintergreen and peppermint) and Twilight flavor (peppermint with vanilla and lavender), sold on its website at $17 for a pack of two. And Aesop Dentifrice Toothpaste ($17) continues the Australian brand’s takeover of your bathroom; released in 2017, it has sea buckthorn to relieve gum aggravation, as well as cardamom and wasabi extract to freshen breath-although it lacks fluoride.

They join classics such as Italian brand Marvis, founded in 1958, which has apothecary-chic packaging and toothpastes in flavors like jasmine, ginger, and licorice ($12) sold at Barneys New York and Sephora. There’s also French brand Buly 1803 whose fluoride-free toothpastes ($29) are blended with mineral-rich thermal water from Castéra-Verduzan, the first spa town in France, and sold on Net-a-Porter; they come in flavors such as apple, orange-ginger-clove, and mint-coriander-cucumber.

By comparison you can get a two-pack of Crest from Target for less than $5.

"They’ve gone into the market of trying to please the consumer more aesthetically, and people like that” Hilburg says.

"Regular toothpaste has very, very bad packaging,” says Victoire de Taillac, co-founder of Buly 1803, which feature a vintage looking snake on their tubes. "Toothpaste is often something that men will buy. Men use less beauty products than women, but men are very particular [about toothpaste]. ”

Fluoride Alternatives

One of the more ornate products on the market is Theodent, which first launched in 2012 in Whole Foods and is now sold through Amazon. The formula incorporates cocoa beans and a fluoride alternative called rennou and is packaged in brown tubes resembling a chocolate bar, with shiny gold lettering and caps.

Arman Sadeghpour, chief executive officer and co-founder of the brand, says that even though it doesn’t contain fluoride, the rennou can grow individual unit crystal in (i.e. remineralize) your enamel in much the same way. The classic offering is crystal mint-flavored and costs $16, but the clinical strength version with a higher concentration of rennou will set you back $100 for a tube.

"There are a lot of folks that are concerned with getting too much fluoride,” says Jim Ratcliff, chief executive officer of Rowpar Pharmaceuticals, which manufactures toothpaste brand Closys ($7) in both fluoride and fluoride-free varieties. Sold in mass retailers such as Walgreens and Walmart, Closys instead uses stabilized chlorine dioxide to impede plaque formation and kill harmful bacteria.

"A lot of the folks who buy our products are looking for things that are as non-irritating and don’t contain any more dangerous chemicals than is necessary,” Ratcliff continues. (It’s true that swallowing a lot of toothpaste can be bad for you, so most dentists simple say don’t-and just use a pea-sized amount; it’s not necessary to fill up the whole inch of bristles.)

Split the Difference

Lawrence Fung, a dentist who started Silicon Beach Dental in Los Angeles, suggests if you’re seeking fluoride alternatives to just split the difference and alternate between a fluoride-free toothpaste to one containing fluoride throughout the week. Because at the end of the day, cleaning the teeth is the most important thing.

Although he’s a big fan of Aesop, stocking their hand wash and mouth rinse in his practice’s bathrooms, for his patients, who include players for the Los Angeles Clippers and Los Angeles Rams, Fung uses the Hello brand which launched in 2013 and is now sold at Whole Foods and Ulta among other retailers.

"They have potassium nitrate in it, which is really helpful for sensitivity,” Fung says. "They are not extremely holistic, but not as mainstream as some of the bigger brands.”

Hello toothpastes start at $3.99, for kids’ formulas in flavors like apple and watermelon, and go up to $9 for whitening and charcoal options. Extracts such as açai, dragon fruit, and hemp along with bright colors on the packaging are designed to add some fun into dental care, explains founder Craig Dubitsky.Dubitsky came up with the idea for the brand after noticing the unappealing packaging of mass-marketed toothpaste brands, often featuring extracted teeth. "Everything in the category to me seemed to be about fear and shame,” he says. Instead his toothpastes, with the friendly moniker "Hello,” come in both fluoride and fluoride-free varieties, with cheerful color options including a millennial pink tube.

Despite the growing luxury alternatives to workaday Crest, Fung and Touro College’s Hilburg both agree that the best toothpaste to buy is the one that you will actually use.

"If people love something, it’s hard to put a price on that,” Fung says. "If it makes them want to brush three times a day, then it is worth more.”