Toothpaste

Pepsodent. It's cheap. I have no idea what's in it, but I've used it for years, don't have sensitivity issues, and no cavities. My dentist says to just keep doing what I'm doing, so I've followed that advice. I probably ought to go look and see what's on the label and where it's made.
 
I am a dentist (in case you couldn't tell from my User Name). I generally tell my patients to buy whatever is on sale as long as it has fluoride. I can not stress enough the importance of fluoride. I understand that there are those that choose not to use fluoride..to each his own, but from someone that has seen the comparison of people that grew up with fluoride vs. those that haven't, the benefits of fluoride FAR exceed any potential risk. The perceived problems with fluoride have to do with excessive ingestion, which isn't exactly what people should be doing with it. I am not in the anti-fluoride camp. Unless you have pristine oral hygiene, fluoride is critical to dental health. The other thing I stress is to avoid any of the whitening toothpastes. Toothpastes have significant variations in abrasiveness. Abrasiveness is a huge problem in terms of sensitivity and wear. Couple that with the fact that 95% of people brush too hard and you have a recipe for problems. The problem is that toothpaste companies do not freely discuss the abrasiveness of their brands. The whitening one are the worst and they don't really whiten your teeth. They are also significantly more expensive. So it is a lose-lose. Stick with basic fluoride toothpastes. We love Colgate Total, Sensodyne, Pronamel, etc. Hope this helps.
 
My dentist tells me to use any brand I like as long as the active ingredient is stannous fluoride. I get whatever's the least expensive on any given shopping day.
 
I use to use Tom's but the Anise flavored one. My teeth have been bad since I used it. The dentist is wanting me to use more fluoride products now since I used Tom's. I was put on expensive toothpaste by Colgate (fruit flavored) at $5 for a small tube. I'm also suppose to use kids mouthwash with fluoride since I don't like mint. I was using kid's fruit toothpaste too (since everything else was fruit) after purchasing one or two tubes of the expensive Colgate stuff with extra fluoride.

Tom's has several varieties with fluoride.
 

Plain Colgate cavity only - can't stand the taste of any other kind - have tried them all through the years.
 
Xyliwhite. It kills me to actually pay for toothpaste after years of CVS, Walgreens, etc. paying me to take home Crest & Colgate, but I finally switched DH and myself over to no fluoride, minimal ingredient, xylitol toothpaste [which I have been buying for my kids forever].
iherb.com is usually the cheapest as they have a low free shipping threshold, usually $20, and sometimes extra 10% or so off an order. I just ordered 8 - after discounts they worked out to $3.33 a tube.
 
Colgate is the brand I usually buy. I get different types within that brand. I've tred Crest, but that particular kind with Scope breaks my mouth out in blisters so I just got mad at the brand in general.
 
Doesn't matter to me, but everyone else in my house is picky LOL. If it was up to me, I'd get AIM, since it's usually about 88 cents a tube here.

But DH likes Colgate Total with whitening and peroxide paste (not gel), oldest DD likes Crest 3D white, the other kids all use Crest Kids toothpaste (not mint). I use whatever is closest to me on the counter when I go to brush my teeth - although if it's not mint flavored they don't feel as clean to me.

Thankfully, nearly every type of toothpaste listed above can be found on sale at my local grocery store for 94-97 cents at some point, sometimes less with the purchase of new brushes, and I stock up then so I never pay more than that. After Christmas this year I found Monsters Inc Spin-brushes for the kids that came packaged with a full tube of Crest Kids in the Christmas clearance stuff for $2 each. :)


PS - I used to work for the company that created the Polymer used in Colgate Total products - pharmaceutical co, NOT Colgate itself. It's a real thing - and it really does leave a protective film over your teeth that lasts for hours or until you eat/drink. Just thought I'd throw that out there!
 
I prefer Tom's Whole Care (with fluoride) and Colgate Total. DD likes Tom's Wicked Fresh kids. I'm not 100% loyal to a brand though. If I have a coupon that coupled with a sale will give me a free tube, I'm all over it.
 




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