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Sensodyne T/paste 100g: Daily Care $5.80 ($5.22 S&S), Repair/Protect, C/Care $7.30 ($6.57 S&S) + Del ($0 Prime/ $59+) @ Amazon

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45-46% off Sensodyne toothpaste varieties. Amazon is price matching Woolworths.

- Sensodyne Toothpaste Daily Care 100g $5.22 S&S Expired
- Sensodyne Toothpaste Daily Care + Whitening 100g $5.22 S&S
- Sensodyne Repair & Protect Toothpaste 100g $6.57 S&S
- Sensodyne Repair & Protect Extra Fresh Toothpaste 100g $6.57 S&S
- Sensodyne Complete Care + Smart Clean Toothpaste for Sensitive Teeth Extra Fresh 100g $6.57 S&S
- Sensodyne Complete Care + Smart Clean Toothpaste for Sensitive Teeth Cool Mint 100g $6.57 S&S

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

  • which of these is good for improve breath and appearance?

    • +1

      i doubt smearing toothpaste on my face will make me any more attractive.
      However, in some culture, gravyface is a mark of leadership. The leader of the tribe is marked by distinctive uneven smearing of gravy on the face.

      smearing toothpaste on my face should get at least get me a junior vice leadership.

      • ok mate ordered one for gravity

        • +1

          The bumps have gone. You look better 😀

    • It's all the same sh*t with different marketing gimmicks

    • +2

      Repair and protect will help harden against cavities (more than fluoride only). If you have bad breath that is a sign of excessive bacteria, I suggest using Curasept ADS 350 2x a week in addition

      • thanks but what is "Curasept ADS"?

        • +1

          Chlorhexidine gel, use it like toothpaste, but it is an antiseptic not actually a toothpaste. Amazon sell it. Some pharmacies stock it also

          Edit:
          Flossing is important also, toothbrushes don't get in between the gaps no matter how good your technique is. These are the best I have found
          https://www.chemistwarehouse.com.au/buy/102194/white-glo-flo…

          You should probably see a dentist. you likely have a minor cavity, better to get it filled now before it gets larger and destroys the inside of your tooth.

  • +1

    Chemist Warehouse has the 160g value pack that you're better off waiting. It's $4.81 per 100g a bit cheaper.
    https://pricehipster.com/product/Z0I5z-LGwFa08iGVBAkn1g~S6K2…

    • For the original Sensodyne Toothpaste Daily Care.

      • It is, but the difference between the complete care smart clean is only marginal considering if you're a healthy person and that we're here where there's sufficient fluoride in water.

  • +1

    Thanks OP

  • +1

    Warning ⚠️
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/17/toothpaste-l…

    https://tamararubin.com/2025/01/toothpaste-chart/

    One of Sensodyne toothpaste in USA in the research contained Lead and arsenic. Not sure about Sensodyne here …

    • It's important to understand what the article is saying. The brand of toothpaste is completely irrelevant.

      "the contamination seems to lie in some ingredients added to toothpaste, including hydroxyapatite, calcium carbonate and bentonite clay"

      hydroxyapatite is used in some toothpastes as an alternative to fluoride, sourced from cattle bones. Unlike what the article suggests there is good evidence it works, it doesn't help absorb calcium, it is absorbed into bone like calcium, and hardens bone (same mechanism as fluoride)

      calcium carbonate and bentonite clay are minerals, dug out of the ground. It's likely lead occurs naturally in these places also. You might recall they found asbestos in baby powder a few years ago for the same reason. There is no point going on a boycott crusade against one brand and then continuing to use products that contain the same ingredients

      • -1

        The brand of toothpaste is not completely irrelevant, as brands differ in ingredients and composition. Some brands clearly have more and some less based on these various compositions.

        It would be very easy to have a list of these toothpastes and the amount of lead found and just go for a brand that has less or none, but the linked article doesn't have this, you would need to go to the source

        • Brands don't differ in ingredients and composition, products do. Every brand makes a product similar to one sold by another brand. The problem is contamination of the ingredients sourced from industrial sources, quarries.

          It would be very easy to have a list of these toothpastes and the amount of lead found and just go for a brand that has less or none,

          No it would be completely pointless.

          • If a brand switches manufacturer the list is useless.
          • If a brand keeps the same manufacturer and the manufacturer switches industrial suppliers the list is useless.
          • if a brand keeps the same manufacturer, the manufacturer keeps the same supplier, and the supplier switches to a new quarry, the list is useless.
          • if a brand keeps the same manufacturer, the manufacturer keeps the same supplier, the supplier remains in the same quarry, but they dig in a different location, the list is useless.
          • If the brand is sold in the USA and the product sold in Australia is manufactured elsewhere the list is useless.

          You would need a list that is updated every month and tracks every batch number for every product produced by every brand on the market. That isn't 'very easy'.

          Only a well funded government regulator could produce something like this, but we're all about 'cutting waste, fraud and abuse' these days and sacking thousands of 'useless public servants'.

          If you are concerned you can act on the information available, today, and avoid the contamination by understanding the problem.

          The brand is irrelevant. The list in the article quoted is useless, it is already obsolete.

          • @[Deactivated]: Sorry swap 'brand" with "brand and line" or product as you called it, and it holds, but happy to be corrected on that for not being pedantic enough with my description. The fact of the matter is that as the article said, the lead is coming in from some ingredients that are commonly included for specific reasons, and not included for other specific reasons. It follows from that for example that a whitening agent that may have lead in it isn't going to be used in a line that isn't mean to be "whitening". Yes of course ingredients might change from time to time, but it would be equally easy for someone hosting the list to update it. Even if it ended up be being that your stock standard toothpaste was the only one not to have any ingredients that are likely to have lead, that's a start for everyone who's priority is just not to have lead in their toothpaste. The story isolated 3 ingredients that were the carriers of the contaminants, you should be able to find a toothpaste without those 3 ingredients and be relatively safe.

            • -1

              @Jackson:

              Sorry swap 'brand" with "brand and line" or product as you called it, and it holds

              No, it doesn't. I'm not being pedantic. You genuinely don't understand.

              Yes of course ingredients might change from time to time, but it would be equally easy for someone hosting the list to update it.

              No. I've explained above.

              you should be able to find a toothpaste without those 3 ingredients and be relatively safe.

              Yes, avoid the ingredients. The brand is irrelevant. That is the only option unless regulations are changed, which is unlikely

  • If I recall correctly, this toothpaste is very 'sharp' and you cannot keep it in your mouth for long - it 'burns' like hell. Personally I don't like it.

    • +1

      I hate the taste of Sensodyne. I find the Colgate Sensitive toothpaste works equally well for sensitivity and it tastes HEAPS better. The Colgate Sensitive range is often half price at Coles and Woolworths too.

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