By Dr. Rita Kanbar. Prosthodontist, Lebanon Dental Studio (Jal el Dib)
In the past two years, composite veneers have gone from a “budget option dentists rarely discuss” to one of the most searched-for cosmetic treatments online. TikTok creators show them being placed in a single visit, the price tag is a fraction of porcelain, and the marketing makes them look like a no-compromise alternative. The reality is more nuanced. Composite veneers have their place, mostly small, single-tooth repairs, but for a smile makeover meant to last, they solve a different problem than porcelain, wear faster, and need more upkeep. At Lebanon Dental Studio, Dr. Rita builds lasting smiles in porcelain.
This guide compares the two honestly, cost, lifespan, aesthetics and upkeep, and explains why, for most smile makeovers, porcelain is the better long-term investment.
What Composite Veneers Are
Composite veneers are sculpted directly onto your teeth using a tooth-coloured resin, the same material used for white fillings, but built up in thin layers and polished to imitate the look of porcelain. The entire procedure is usually done in a single visit, with no laboratory step. In most cases very little or no enamel needs to be removed, which is one of the reasons they have become so popular.
There are two sub-categories worth knowing about:
- Direct composite veneers, built up by the dentist freehand, chairside, in one appointment.
- Indirect composite veneers, fabricated in a lab on a model and bonded in a second visit. Slightly more expensive, slightly more durable.
What Porcelain Veneers Are
Porcelain veneers are thin shells of dental ceramic, typically E.max lithium disilicate or layered feldspathic porcelain, made in a dental laboratory and bonded to the front of the teeth. They require a small amount of enamel preparation (or sometimes none with no-prep techniques), a digital scan or impression, and a second visit for cementation. Our zirconia vs E.max guide explains the porcelain materials in more detail.
Where Each One Shines
Where composite still has a role
- Repairing a single chipped or worn front tooth, where a small amount of bonding blends the fix invisibly.
- Closing one small gap (diastema) without committing to a full set of restorations.
- A short-term “trial run” to preview a new tooth shape before investing in porcelain.
Why porcelain is our material of choice
- You are designing a full smile makeover for an important milestone (wedding, public-facing career step, family photos).
- You want the result to last 10+ years with minimal maintenance.
- You drink coffee, tea, red wine or smoke, porcelain will hold its colour where composite slowly stains.
- You want the most natural light reflection and translucency, especially on the upper front teeth.
- You are correcting multiple issues at once: shape, length, colour, and small alignment differences.
The TikTok Question: Are Composite Veneers Too Good to Be True?
The viral version of composite veneers usually shows a creator getting a full set of dramatically white, bright veneers in two hours for a few hundred dollars. The result on day one can look striking. The honest part of the story is what happens at year three and year five: the resin picks up surface staining from coffee, tea and curry; the polish dulls; the edges where the composite meets the natural tooth can yellow slightly; and chips at the incisal edge become more common.
None of this means composite veneers are bad. It means they have a maintenance rhythm. Plan on a polish every 6 to 12 months, an occasional touch-up of a small chip, and a full replacement somewhere between year 3 and year 5.
How We Decide With You
At our Jal el Dib clinic, we do not start a cosmetic case with a material choice. We start with the smile design, shape, proportion, length, colour, and how the smile sits in your face. Then we ask: what is the longest-lasting, most natural-looking material for this design? For a full smile makeover, that answer is almost always porcelain. E.max or layered ceramic that holds its colour and translucency for years. Where a case only needs one small repair, we will tell you honestly that simple bonding is enough rather than selling you a full set.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Are composite veneers really cheaper than porcelain in Lebanon?
Yes. Composite veneers in Lebanon typically cost 40 to 60 percent less per tooth than porcelain veneers. The trade-off is lifespan and stain resistance, not the immediate look.
How long do composite veneers last in Lebanon?
With good hygiene and a polish every 6 to 12 months, expect 3 to 5 years on average. Heavy coffee, tea or red wine consumption shortens that window.
Can I switch from composite veneers to porcelain later?
Yes. Composite veneers can be removed and replaced with porcelain when you are ready, and because composite typically preserves more enamel, the transition is straightforward.
Do composite veneers stain?
They can. Coffee, tea, red wine, curry, and tobacco are the main culprits. Routine professional polishing removes most surface staining; deeper discolouration at the edges of older composites is usually a sign it is time to replace or refresh them.
Are composite veneers safe for my natural teeth?
Yes, when placed by a dentist trained in cosmetic dentistry. In most cases the tooth structure is preserved almost entirely, which means the underlying tooth remains healthy and the procedure is largely reversible. As with any restoration, the longevity depends on bite, hygiene and habits.
Lebanon Dental Studio · Dr. Rita Kanbar, Prosthodontist · Jal el Dib · ★ 4.9 Book on WhatsApp: +961 71 677 261 Related reading: Zirconia vs E.max Veneers · Hollywood Smile Cost in Lebanon 2026 · Veneers for Crooked Teeth