Review · Dental Health
DentalPrime
An expensive $140-a-month oral capsule that hides its full formula and doses before checkout, cites no trial on the finished product, and pushes add-ons — the steep price and thin product-specific evidence mean most buyers can skip it.
Skeptic read
Skeptical5.4/10
An expensive $140-a-month oral capsule that hides its full formula and doses before checkout, cites no trial on the finished product, and pushes add-ons — the steep price and thin product-specific evidence mean most buyers can skip it.
- Price checked
- $140
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page does not show the full ingredient panel or per-ingredient doses before you buy
- Better use case
- People who want a daily oral-health supplement to use alongside brushing, flossing, and regular cleanings
- Skip if
- You expect a pill to replace the dentist or fix existing dental problems on its own
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What DentalPrime is and how it works
DentalPrime is a daily oral-health capsule. The idea behind it is simple: your mouth has its own community of bacteria — the oral microbiome — and the balance of “good” and “bad” bacteria affects your gums, breath, and teeth. DentalPrime is marketed as a way to support that balance from the inside, alongside normal brushing and flossing.
It is a real product. A real company ships a physical bottle, billed once through ClickBank. It is not a subscription trap, and it is not vaporware. The honest catch is price and transparency: $140 for a 30-day supply, with the full ingredient panel not published before you buy.
What’s inside DentalPrime
Here is the most important caveat: the sales page does not list every ingredient with its exact dose before purchase. That is a transparency gap, and I’ll say so plainly. Below are the ingredient types this category of oral-health supplement typically leans on, and what each is generally used for. When the bottle arrives, check the Supplement Facts panel against this list.
- Oral probiotic strains (e.g., Lactobacillus and Streptococcus salivarius types) — typically dosed in the billions of CFU. Used to support a balanced mouth microbiome and fresher breath.
- Inulin or prebiotic fiber — usually a few hundred milligrams. Acts as food for beneficial bacteria, helping the probiotics take hold.
- Vitamin C — commonly around 60–90 mg. Supports normal gum tissue and connective tissue.
- Vitamin D3 — often 1,000–2,000 IU. Helps the body maintain normal calcium levels, which supports teeth and bone.
- Zinc — commonly 8–15 mg. Helps maintain a normal immune response in the mouth and may support fresher breath.
Because DentalPrime uses a blend and does not publish per-ingredient amounts up front, you cannot confirm any of these are dosed to match research levels until you read the label on the bottle.
Does DentalPrime really work?
Honestly, the category is more promising than the proof. There is genuine, growing research into the oral microbiome and how probiotic bacteria like Streptococcus salivarius may help support gum health and fresher breath, and the National Institutes of Health has published on the mouth microbiome’s role in oral health (see the NIH National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, nidcr.nih.gov). Vitamin C’s role in maintaining normal gum tissue is well established (NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, ods.od.nih.gov).
What’s missing is product-specific proof: no published clinical trial on the finished DentalPrime formula is cited, and the per-ingredient doses aren’t disclosed before purchase. So the fair, calibrated read is this — the ingredient types DentalPrime appears to use have reasonable category-level support for supporting gum health and a balanced mouth microbiome, but I can’t tell you DentalPrime itself is proven, because the maker hasn’t shown that work. It is a supplement to sit alongside brushing, flossing, and cleanings — not a substitute for them.
One thing to be clear about: a capsule does not regrow enamel or remove cavities. Enamel does not regenerate on its own, and a cavity is decay that a dentist has to address physically. If any marketing implies a pill can do that, treat it as marketing — no oral supplement can legally claim to treat dental disease.
Side effects: what’s commonly reported
For oral-probiotic-style supplements, serious side effects are uncommon. The most frequently reported issues are mild and short-lived — temporary bloating, gas, or a slightly unsettled stomach in the first days as your system adjusts. These usually fade.
Be more cautious if you are pregnant or nursing, immune-compromised, or taking prescription medication; probiotic products are generally well tolerated, but your own doctor knows your situation. None of this is medical advice — it’s the plain pattern of what people in this category tend to report.
Is DentalPrime a scam or legit?
Legit, with caveats. The credibility checks that matter come back clean: there is a real company behind it, it ships an actual physical bottle, the price is charged once rather than quietly turned into a subscription, and the 60-day refund is processed by ClickBank directly — not gated by the vendor’s goodwill.
The fair criticisms are about value and transparency, not honesty: $140 is steep for a 30-day oral-health supply, the full formula isn’t published before checkout, and the checkout offers extra bottles you’ll want to decline if you only came for one. None of that makes it a scam. It makes it a real product you should buy with eyes open.
Is DentalPrime worth it?
For most buyers, no: DentalPrime is real but skip-worthy at $140 for 30 days with a hidden formula and no product proof. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. The price-to-evidence math is simply poor — you’re paying a premium for an undisclosed blend with no trial on the finished product. If you’re hoping a pill will replace the dentist or repair existing damage, this isn’t that, and no supplement is.
If you do buy, read the Supplement Facts label when it arrives, decline the checkout add-ons unless you want them, and give it a fair trial within the 60-day window.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient story before I read the sales pitch — that’s the order that matters. I weighed the ingredient types against the category-level research for what they’re generally used for, flagged where the maker hides doses, separated genuine credibility signals (real bottle, real company, refund honored by ClickBank) from marketing noise, and named the real trade-offs in price and transparency. No “medically reviewed” badge here — just a retired nurse reading the label out loud.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
DentalPrime earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— Mara Vance · Hospice nurse, retired (RN, 28 years)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Does DentalPrime have side effects?
- No serious side effects are commonly reported for oral-probiotic-style capsules. The most common complaints in this category are mild and digestive — temporary bloating or an upset stomach as your gut adjusts. If you are pregnant, immune-compromised, or on medication, check with your doctor first. This is general information, not medical advice.
- Is DentalPrime a scam?
- No. A real company ships a physical bottle, and ClickBank's 60-day refund is honored directly by ClickBank. The fair criticism is that it is pricey and the formula is not fully disclosed before purchase — not that it is a scam.
- How much does DentalPrime cost with upsells?
- The front-end price is $140 for a 30-day supply. Checkout offers optional extra bottles and add-on guides, which you can decline. If you accept them, your total can climb well past $140, so read each screen before clicking.
- What exactly is inside DentalPrime?
- The page describes a blend aimed at supporting the mouth microbiome and gum health, but it does not publish the full panel or per-ingredient amounts before purchase. That is a real transparency gap. Once the bottle arrives, the Supplement Facts label should list everything — read it.
