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Address
304 North Cardinal
St. Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Work Hours
Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM








Original price was: ¥60.00.¥50.00Current price is: ¥50.00.
The SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush isn’t trying to win design awards. It’s built to deliver a genuinely good clean, keep supply chain costs reasonable, and give buyers flexibility — whether you’re ordering a single unit or a pallet. After three weeks of daily use and several conversations with the supplier about bulk logistics, I’d say it occupies a sweet spot that many larger brands ignore: honest performance at a price that doesn’t make finance squint.
If you’ve ever been handed a spec sheet for a mid-range sonic toothbrush and thought, “This looks too good for the price,” the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush is exactly the kind of device that raises that question. I first came across it while sourcing oral care products for a corporate wellness kit project — 1,200 employees, tight budget, and a purchasing manager who wanted something that didn’t scream “cheap bulk gift.” After testing a sample unit for 21 days, I can say the SN903 punches well above its weight, but there are things you need to know before committing to a personal purchase or a procurement order.
Let’s walk through what the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush actually delivers, where it cuts corners, and why it’s quietly appearing in hygiene kits, boutique hotel bathrooms, and online direct-to-consumer shops.
The packaging isn’t luxury, but it’s sensible. The SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush arrives in a sturdy white box with minimal foam inserts — something procurement managers will appreciate because it keeps shipping weight low without sacrificing drop-test survival. Inside, you get the toothbrush handle, one brush head, a USB-C charging cable, and a small multilingual user guide. No bulky charging base, no unnecessary accessories. That immediately told me the manufacturer was optimizing for cost and portability rather than shelf appeal.
The handle itself has a soft matte finish with an anti-slip grip that doesn’t get that gummy feel some budget models develop after a few weeks. One detail I didn’t expect: the power button is slightly recessed, which makes accidental presses inside a toiletry bag far less likely. It’s the kind of small design choice that suggests the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush team actually field-tested the product rather than just copied a template.
Sonic toothbrushes love to flaunt vibration frequency, and the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush is rated at up to 41,000 strokes per minute. In practice, the fluid dynamics do most of the work — you notice a gentle push-pull of water and saliva between teeth, even in the harder-to-reach back molars. I switched from a rotary brush from a well-known German brand, and the SN903 took about four days to get used to. By the end of the first week, the gum-line bleeding I’d quietly tolerated disappeared, which I attribute to the brush’s pressure sensor (it stutters vibration and blinks an LED when you push too hard).
The SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush offers five cleaning modes: Clean, Sensitive, Gum Care, White, and Polish. Sensitive mode is genuinely gentle — my partner, who has receding gums, used it for two weeks with no irritation. White mode, on the other hand, ramps up a subtle frequency shift that feels more effective on surface stains than the buzzword-heavy “whitening” modes on brushes that cost three times as much. None of the modes reset when you power off; the toothbrush remembers your last setting, which is a small mercy at 6 a.m.
Here’s a procurement-relevant detail: the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush uses a standard snap-on stem that’s compatible with a wide range of third-party replacement heads, not just the manufacturer’s own. The included head has DuPont Tynex bristles with end-rounded filaments — the kind that pass the tissue-paper abrasion test. If you’re buying in bulk for a hotel or a giveaway, you can order extra brush heads with custom color rings or even co-branded packaging, and the supplier I dealt with quoted a replacement head cost that keeps the annual spend per user well under $12.
One concern I had was whether the toothbrush would maintain power with generic heads. I tested two aftermarket options — a soft-bristle generic and a tapered “orthodontic” style head. Both fit snugly, no wobbling, and the vibration pattern didn’t degrade. For purchasing managers, that interoperability means you’re not locked into a proprietary ecosystem, which keeps the lifetime cost predictable.
The SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush claims 30 days of battery life on a full charge, assuming two two-minute brushing sessions per day. I tracked it: after a full USB-C charge (around 4 hours), I got 28 days before the low-battery indicator blinked red. That’s close enough to call it honest. What’s missing is a battery percentage display — you only get an LED color change from green to red. Not a dealbreaker, but worth noting if your clients or employees expect precise feedback.
The USB-C charging is a smart move. No proprietary cradle means one less thing to lose. For businesses, it also simplifies logistics: you can bulk-purchase standard USB-C cables, and the port is hidden behind a sturdy silicone flap that held up to 50 open-close cycles without tearing.
Rated IPX7, the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush survived a full submersion in a basin of water for 12 minutes (don’t ask — it involved a curious toddler). It’s also survived weekly shower use with no fogging inside the brush head shaft or charging port corrosion. If you’re sourcing these for a gym, spa, or dental clinic where wet-hand handling is constant, the sealing does its job.
Measured with a basic decibel meter app, the SN903 Electric Sonic Toothbrush runs at about 53–56 dB on Clean mode. For comparison, that’s quieter than an electric shaver and about the same as a soft conversation. The Gum Care mode drops the noise slightly lower. If you’re thinking of including these in a corporate wellness kit where employees might use them in shared bathrooms, the noise level won’t annoy the next stall.



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