When you pick up a product, what matters most to you?
It feels solid and premium in my hand
It looks clean and minimal on the counter
It fits neatly into my bathroom without clutter
It looks like something worth what I paid
Reviewing your preferences...
Here's what most brands won't tell you.
The vast majority of electric toothbrushes are made from the cheapest plastic available - ABS, the same material used in disposable packaging.
It scratches within weeks. It stains. It flexes. And it starts to look worn and dirty faster than almost any other object in your bathroom.
You are brushing your teeth with it twice a day. You deserve better than that.
How would you describe your bathroom style?
Clean and minimal - everything has a place
Modern - I invest in the things I use every day
Practical - function first, looks second
I have not really thought about it
Which of the following brushes have you used before?
(Choose all that apply)
Oral-B
Philips Sonicare
Quip
A supermarket or pharmacy brand
A manual toothbrush only
Something else
Analysing what you have tried...
Here's the problem with every one of those.
Every major electric toothbrush brand makes the same design compromise: multiple plastic parts joined together, with visible seams, joints, and connection points where the head meets the body.
Those joints trap moisture, toothpaste residue, and bacteria. Within weeks, that dark ring appears - and once it's there, it never comes off.
It is not a hygiene problem. It is a design failure that every manufacturer decided to live with.
Have you ever noticed dark residue or grime building up where your brush head connects?
Yes - it is one of the most off-putting things
Yes - I have seen it but accepted it
I am not sure - I try not to look too closely
No - mine seems fine
Most people just accept it. They shouldn't have to.
That buildup is not just unpleasant to look at. It is the direct result of a brush that was never designed to stay clean.
Seams, joints, plastic ridges - every one of them is a place where moisture sits and bacteria multiplies. Every single day.
How often do you travel with your toothbrush?
Regularly - I travel for work or pleasure often
A few times a year - holidays and trips
Rarely - mostly home use
Checking travel compatibility...
Packing your toothbrush shouldn't be a project.
Most electric toothbrushes require a charging stand, a charging cable, a protective cover, and a bag to put it all in.
The stand doesn't fit in a toiletry bag. The cable is always in the wrong place. The cover falls off. And you end up either leaving your brush at home or spending the trip watching the battery indicator.
The best travel toothbrush is one you pack in 3 seconds and never think about again.
How often does your current toothbrush need charging?
Every week - it is a constant annoyance
Every 2-4 weeks - manageable but still annoying
I use a manual brush - never charges
60+ days - I barely think about it
Analysing your preferences...
Great news... you qualify! 🎉
Based on everything you told us, the MiroShine Sonic was built specifically for people like you - and it is a perfect match.