Teeth whitening is the most-requested cosmetic dental treatment worldwide, and one of the most common questions international patients and Tokyo residents ask before booking is simply: what does it actually cost in Japan? This guide gives a clear, current (2026) picture of professional whitening pricing in Japan, explains the difference between in-office and take-home options, walks through the BEYOND® system used at Rodin Dental Office Tokyo, and covers the factors that influence your final result — including when whitening is the right choice and when veneers make more sense.
Throughout, prices are quoted as published figures or commonly-cited ranges. Whitening outcomes vary from person to person, so this article describes what is typical rather than promising a specific result; your own expected outcome is best assessed in person after a shade evaluation.
How much does teeth whitening cost in Japan?
Professional teeth whitening in Japan is an elective cosmetic treatment, which means it is not covered by Japanese national health insurance and is paid out of pocket. Across private clinics in Tokyo and other major cities, a course of professional in-office whitening commonly falls in the ¥30,000–¥80,000 range. The spread is wide because clinics bundle different things into the price: some quote whitening alone, while others include an examination, a professional cleaning, or follow-up sessions.
At Rodin Dental Office Tokyo, the pricing is transparent and quoted in writing before you commit. BEYOND® in-office whitening is ¥34,900 for existing patients who have already had a recent examination. For new patients — including most international and dental-tourism visitors — the First Visit Whitening Package is ¥59,900 and bundles a comprehensive examination, x-rays, clinical photography, and a professional mechanical tooth cleaning (PMTC) alongside the whitening itself. That package structure exists for a clinical reason, not just convenience: whitening should only be done after decay, gum problems, and existing restorations have been assessed, and a clean tooth surface produces a more even result.
It helps to understand why Japan is frequently cheaper than the patient's home country for the same category of treatment. Professional in-office whitening in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia is also an out-of-pocket cosmetic service, and commonly-cited published ranges put a single in-office course well above typical Japanese pricing. The table below shows representative ranges so you can compare like-for-like; these are general market reference points rather than quotes from any specific overseas clinic.
| Market | Typical in-office whitening course | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Japan (Rodin Tokyo) | ¥34,900–¥59,900 | ¥34,900 existing patients; ¥59,900 new-patient package incl. exam + cleaning |
| Japan (general private clinics) | ¥30,000–¥80,000 | Varies by system and what is bundled |
| United States | US$400–$1,000+ (≈¥60,000–¥150,000+) | Zoom / BEYOND / Philips systems; often whitening only |
| United Kingdom | £300–£700+ (≈¥58,000–¥135,000+) | Power/laser whitening in private practice |
| Australia | A$500–$1,000+ (≈¥50,000–¥100,000+) | In-chair whitening; take-home often extra |
- Source: Rodin Dental Office published price list (2026)
- Source: Commonly-cited published cosmetic-whitening ranges for the respective markets
Two practical points follow from this. First, for a visitor already considering a trip to Japan, whitening is rarely the sole reason to travel — but it is an easy, high-value addition to a trip planned around veneers, crowns, or implants. Second, the gap between a ¥34,900 session and a ¥59,900 package is simply the diagnostic work and cleaning; if you are a returning patient with a recent exam, you pay the lower figure.
In-office vs home whitening: which is right for you?
There are three broad tiers of whitening, and they differ in strength, supervision, speed, and cost. Understanding the trade-offs helps you choose the option that fits your timeline and your teeth.
In-office (in-chair) professional whitening
In-office whitening uses a higher-concentration peroxide gel applied by trained clinical staff, with the gums carefully isolated and protected, and the reaction accelerated by a specialised light. Because it is performed under supervision, it is the fastest route to a visible change — typically a single 60–90 minute appointment — and the strength of the gel is higher than anything available for home use. This is the option most patients mean when they say professional whitening, and it is what the BEYOND® system at Rodin delivers.
Dentist-supplied take-home whitening
Take-home whitening uses custom trays made from impressions of your teeth, filled with a lower-concentration gel that you wear at home for a set period each day over one to two weeks. It is gentler and gradual, gives you control, and is excellent for maintenance, but it takes longer to reach the same point and depends on consistent use. In Japan, dentist-supplied take-home kits commonly run ¥20,000–¥40,000.
Over-the-counter products
Whitening strips, pens, and toothpastes sold without a prescription are the cheapest option, but their active concentration is tightly limited and they cannot match professional results. They also carry a higher risk of uneven results or gum irritation when used without a fitted tray or supervision. They are best thought of as light touch-ups, not a substitute for a professional course.
| Option | Speed | Relative cost (Japan) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-office (BEYOND®) | Fastest — single visit | ¥34,900–¥59,900 | A visible change quickly; a short trip; matching a shade before veneers/crowns |
| Dentist take-home trays | Gradual — 1–2 weeks | ¥20,000–¥40,000 | Gentle, controlled whitening and long-term maintenance |
| Over-the-counter | Slow / limited | Low | Minor touch-ups between professional treatment |
Many patients combine approaches: an in-office session for an immediate change, followed by take-home trays for maintenance every several months. A short consultation establishes which combination suits your starting shade, sensitivity, and schedule.
The BEYOND® whitening system: how it works
Rodin uses BEYOND® for in-office whitening — a widely-used professional platform with a documented track record. The system pairs a professional-strength peroxide gel with a cool light source designed to accelerate the whitening reaction without overheating the teeth, which is one of the contributors to post-treatment sensitivity. The light unit combines halogen and LED output and uses a filter that removes ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths, so the energy reaching the teeth is focused on activating the gel rather than exposing tissue to UV.
A typical BEYOND® appointment at Rodin follows a clear sequence:
- Examination and shade assessment — your current tooth colour is recorded against a shade guide, and any decay, sensitivity, or restoration that could affect the result is noted first.
- Cleaning — a professional cleaning (PMTC) removes surface film so the gel acts on a clean, even surface (included in the new-patient package).
- Isolation and gum protection — the lips and gums are isolated and a protective barrier is applied so the gel only contacts enamel.
- Gel application and light activation — the peroxide gel is applied and the BEYOND® cool light is used to accelerate the reaction; the cycle is usually repeated two to three times during the visit.
- Final shade check and after-care — the gel is removed, teeth are rinsed, the new shade is compared with the starting record, and after-care guidance (including the 24–48 hour 'white diet') is given.
The whole process is completed in a single 60–90 minute appointment. Many patients see several shades of improvement in one visit — figures in the 3–8 shade range are commonly cited for in-office systems — but the actual change depends on your starting shade and the cause of the discolouration, so results are individual rather than guaranteed.
What affects the final result?
Whitening is a chemical process that lightens the natural tooth structure; it is not paint, and it cannot change every kind of discolouration equally. Several factors influence how much change you will see and how long it lasts.
- Type of staining — extrinsic stains from coffee, tea, red wine, curry, and tobacco respond well. Intrinsic discolouration built into the tooth (from ageing, certain medications, or developmental causes) responds less predictably.
- Starting shade — teeth that are more yellow tend to respond more visibly than teeth that are grey, because the chemistry acts more readily on yellow-brown pigments.
- Tetracycline staining — banding from the antibiotic tetracycline taken in childhood is one of the hardest cases for whitening and often improves only modestly; porcelain veneers are frequently a more suitable option for these teeth.
- Existing restorations — crowns, veneers, and fillings do not whiten. If they are visible in your smile, the surrounding natural teeth may end up lighter than the restoration, which sometimes leads to replacing older restorations to match.
- Diet and habits — heavy coffee, tea, red wine, and smoking re-stain teeth faster and shorten how long the result lasts.
- Maintenance — occasional take-home top-ups and good daily hygiene extend the result; without them, teeth gradually drift back toward the starting shade.
Because of these variables, the result is typically described as lasting somewhere around six months to two years before a touch-up is wanted, with diet and habits being the biggest levers. This is also why an honest consultation matters: if your discolouration is intrinsic or you have visible restorations, a clinician should tell you up front that whitening alone may not achieve what you are picturing, and discuss veneers as an alternative or complement.
Combining whitening with other treatments (and dental tourism)
Whitening rarely happens in isolation. Because it changes the shade of your natural teeth — and because crowns, veneers, and fillings cannot be whitened afterwards — the order in which treatments are done matters a great deal. For anyone planning cosmetic work, whitening usually comes first so that any subsequent restorations can be colour-matched to the brighter, final shade.
This sequencing is especially valuable for dental-tourism patients on a compressed schedule. Because whitening is a single-visit treatment, it slots neatly into the start of a trip:
- Day 1 — examination, cleaning, and in-office whitening, establishing the new baseline shade.
- Following days — veneers, crowns, or other restorations are designed and fabricated to match the whitened shade, so the final result is uniform rather than having bright restorations against duller natural teeth.
- Before departure — final fit and a shade check across the whole smile.
For patients who only want whitening, the appointment is short enough to add to a single day in Tokyo with time to spare. For patients combining whitening with a smile makeover, doing it first protects the investment in the more expensive restorative work. A written treatment plan, provided after a free online consultation, lays out the full sequence and the all-in cost before you travel, so there are no surprises mid-trip.
Is teeth whitening safe?
Professional teeth whitening performed under clinical supervision has a long, well-documented safety record. The active ingredient — hydrogen or carbamide peroxide — has been used in dentistry for decades, and the in-office process is designed to keep the gel on the enamel and off the soft tissue.
- Temporary sensitivity is the most common side effect — some patients notice short-lived tooth sensitivity or mild gum irritation for a day or two, which typically resolves on its own. Desensitising products can help and the clinician can adjust the protocol.
- Gum protection — in-office whitening isolates and shields the gums before the stronger gel is applied, which is a key advantage over unsupervised over-the-counter products.
- Enamel — used as directed, professional whitening does not 'strip' or damage enamel; it lightens pigments within the existing tooth structure.
- Pre-treatment screening matters — whitening is done after decay and gum disease are assessed and addressed, because applying gel to an untreated cavity or inflamed gum is what causes problems. This is exactly why Rodin includes an examination in the new-patient package.
- Not for everyone — whitening is generally deferred during pregnancy and is not recommended for young children; a clinician will advise based on your situation.
The single most important safety factor is supervision. The risks associated with whitening are overwhelmingly linked to unsupervised, over-concentrated, or improperly applied products — not to professional in-office treatment performed after a proper examination. Having the work done by a clinical team, in English, with your medical history reviewed first, is the safest route.
If you are weighing professional whitening in Tokyo, the best next step is a free online consultation: send photos, get an honest assessment of what whitening can realistically achieve for your teeth, and receive a written estimate before you decide.
