Veneers for Jax Beach — no pitch deck, just the price list.
Life in Jacksonville Beach happens on camera whether you plan it or not — sunrise at the pier, coffee on 3rd Street, someone's engagement shoot at Beaches Town Center every single weekend. If a chipped or discolored front tooth makes you edit yourself out of those frames, you've probably also discovered what fixing it seems to require: a consultation, a folder, a financing conversation, and only then a number.
We publish the number first. Composite veneers are $650 per tooth and porcelain $1,250 on our founding fee schedule — live before we open in September 2026 — with member pricing at $550 and $1,050. For a lot of people at the beach end of their twenties and thirties, composite is the smart opening move: roughly half the cost, sculpted in a single longer visit, easy to repair after an unlucky wave or volleyball. Porcelain is the longer-horizon choice, and we'll tell you plainly which your teeth justify.
Getting to us doesn't involve the ditch. The studio is rising in the Ponte Vedra–Nocatee corridor — from Jax Beach you just run south along the beaches past Ponte Vedra and stay coastal. The design consult fits our standard ~31-minute visit and the doors run 7am to 7pm all seven days, so it slots in before work or between a morning session and lunch. Porcelain adds two scheduled visits about two weeks apart; composite often doesn't.
Why this works from here
- No Intracoastal crossing — from 3rd Street it's a straight coastal run south past Ponte Vedra into the corridor
- 7am–7pm, seven days: a consult fits between dawn patrol and your first meeting
- Composite at $650 a tooth is on the same published schedule as everything else — a real option, not an upsell decoy
Questions, answered plainly
I'm 27 and renting near the pier — is composite a smart start or a false economy?
Often genuinely smart. Composite veneers cost $650 a tooth against porcelain's $1,250, get finished in one longer visit, and are straightforward to repair — relevant if your hobbies involve boards and gravity. The trade-off is honesty too: composite dulls and needs refreshing sooner. Many people run composite now and upgrade to porcelain years later; we'll price both paths in writing.
Took a surfboard to the mouth — do I need a veneer or something cheaper?
Get the edge assessed before deciding anything: an emergency exam is $75 (free for members) and a small chip is often a $175 white filling, not a veneer at all. If the corner is truly gone or the tooth's face is cracked, a veneer earns its price — and you'll hear which case is yours, with numbers, before we touch anything.
Do I have to cross the Intracoastal to reach you?
No. The studio is in the Ponte Vedra–Nocatee corridor, so from Jacksonville Beach you head south along the coastal side — past Ponte Vedra, down the corridor. Exact address lands at lease signing; the waitlist hears first.
Should I whiten before getting veneers?
If you want the whole smile brighter, yes — and the order is not negotiable, because veneers are shade-matched to neighboring teeth and never lighten afterward. In-office whitening is $395 ($299 member), and membership includes a touch-up at every visit, which keeps your natural teeth from drifting away from the veneer shade later.
What will this cost me all-in, and when can I actually come in?
Per tooth, published: $650 composite, $1,250 porcelain, member prices $550 and $1,050; most cases involve 4–8 teeth and your exact total is written down at the consult. We open September 2026 — until then, the Founding 500 waitlist locks membership at $29/month for life and gets the address first.
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Come in when it works for you.
We open September 2026 in the Ponte Vedra–Nocatee corridor. Founding members lock $29/month for life — cleanings, exams, X-rays, and a whitening touch-up with every visit.