Two of the most popular cosmetic treatments can both transform your smile — but they work very differently, and the right choice depends on your goals, your timeline, and your budget.
Porcelain veneers are thin, custom-crafted shells of dental ceramic bonded permanently to the front of your teeth. Because they're fabricated in a lab from a digital impression, they can completely reshape a smile — closing gaps, correcting proportions, and delivering a uniform, stain-resistant brilliance that holds up for a decade or more. The tradeoff is that veneers require a small amount of enamel to be prepared, making them a permanent commitment, and they typically involve two to three visits to complete.
Composite bonding, by contrast, is sculpted directly onto your tooth in a single appointment using a tooth-colored resin. It's an excellent, conservative option for fixing a chipped edge, closing a small gap, or refining the shape of one or two teeth — often with little or no enamel removal and at a fraction of the cost. The compromise is durability: composite is softer than porcelain, more prone to staining over time, and generally needs touch-ups or replacement every five to seven years.
So how do you choose? If you're after a dramatic, full-smile makeover with maximum longevity and you want results that resist coffee, wine, and time, veneers are usually worth the investment. If you have a smaller, more targeted concern — or you want a reversible, budget-friendly fix you can complete over lunch — bonding is often the smarter starting point. At your consultation, Dr. Alex will assess your enamel, bite, and aesthetic goals to recommend the approach that gives you the best long-term value.
Veneers win on longevity and stain resistance; bonding wins on speed, cost, and reversibility. The best choice is the one matched to your specific teeth and goals — which is exactly what a consultation is for.