Whitening Guide§

How many shades whiter, realistically.

The kit says 6 shades. The mirror says 2. Why marketing numbers and your actual result diverge — and what to expect.

By Wytte Editorial4 February 20262 minute readCategory · Whitening Guide
A row of colour swatches on whitePhoto: Tima Miroshnichenko / Pexels

Every whitening box says up to 6 shades whiter. The phrase up to is doing a lot of work.

The scale

Dentists rate tooth colour on the VITA Classical shade guide — a 16-step scale from B1 (lightest) to C4 (darkest), with values mixing along the way. Most adults start somewhere in the A2–A3.5 range.

A single shade gap is small in measurement, larger in perception. Two shades is the photo-noticeable threshold for most people. Four is striking.

What "up to 6" actually means

The number on the box is the best-case observed in trials — usually healthy enamel, no extrinsic stain build, perfect protocol, no coffee during the run. Population-average results from at-home strips at 6% hydrogen peroxide over 14 days:

  • Mean lift: 3–4 shades
  • Upper quartile: 5–6 shades (the people the marketing photo is built around)
  • Lower quartile: 2 shades

Everyone underestimates which group they're in.

What predicts a strong response

  • Younger enamel (more translucent — peroxide hits dentin more visibly)
  • Recent dental cleaning (no tartar/pellicle to chew through)
  • Strong extrinsic stain base (more "wow" between day 0 and day 14)
  • Discipline during the run (no coffee/wine/curry — or water in between)

What predicts a weak response

  • Very translucent edges (the front teeth read a colour from the dentin behind, not enamel — limit hit early)
  • Existing internal tetracycline staining (peroxide does little)
  • Heavy coffee continued during the run
  • Less than 25 minutes of contact per session

The honest number for a coffee-drinking adult on a 14-day at-home course is 3 to 4 shades. Five is a good run. Six is a marketing photo.

How to measure your own result

Take a photograph against a white wall, neutral light, day 0 / day 7 / day 14 / day 28. The shade stabilizes 7–14 days after the last session — the day-14 photo is not the final answer. The day-28 one is.

When the result feels small

Day 14 with little visible change usually means three things: extrinsic stain wasn't removed first (need a cleaning), wear time was under 25 min, or the underlying dentin is naturally darker than expected. Plan a re-touch course in 6 weeks rather than continuing.

Three to four shades is a real win.

More: what to know before whitening at home.

Disclaimer. Editorial, not medical advice. Individual results vary.

Disclaimer. Editorial only — not medical advice. The Wytte Journal writes for general education and brand context. If you have ongoing oral health concerns, fillings, gum recession, recent dental work, are pregnant, or are under 18, consult a registered dental professional. Wytte is not a substitute for a dental check-up.
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