Vitamin Enriched Face Base
Makeup Artist Holy Grail
Pros & cons.
- +Genuinely effective dual moisturizer-primer that simplifies morning routines
- +Cushiony texture melts into skin quickly without greasiness or heaviness
- +Creates a superior canvas for foundation with improved longevity and evenness
- +Multivitamin formula (B5, C, E) provides layered antioxidant defense
- +Shea butter and squalane deliver substantial hydration for dry skin types
- +Vegan, cruelty-free, and paraben-free formulation from a legacy prestige brand
- +25-year track record with virtually unchanged formula speaks to proven performance
- −Natural fragrance oils (grapefruit, geranium) plus allergens like limonene and geraniol are problematic for sensitive skin
- −Jar packaging lacks hygiene of a pump and may degrade antioxidant stability over time
- −Too rich for oily skin types and contains moderately comedogenic ingredients
- −At $69 for 1.7 oz the price-to-ingredient sophistication ratio leans toward the brand premium
- −Vitamin actives sit low on the INCI list making the multivitamin angle somewhat overstated
The full review.
A jar of Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base sells every 24 seconds somewhere in the world. That statistic sounds like marketing hyperbole until you consider that this product has been on shelves since 2001 — back when the idea of a moisturizer that doubled as a primer was genuinely novel. Bobbi Brown created it for backstage use, needing something that could hydrate a model’s skin and create a workable canvas for foundation in a single step, under the unforgiving glare of runway lighting. Twenty-five years later, the formula remains essentially unchanged, which either speaks to its perfection or to Estée Lauder’s reluctance to fix what isn’t broken. Probably both.
The texture is the first thing that earns your attention. It’s a rich cream that somehow feels lightweight — a contradiction that the combination of shea butter, squalane, and cyclopentasiloxane manages to pull off with remarkable grace. You scoop a pea-sized amount from the jar (more on that jar in a moment), press it between your palms, and press it into your skin. It melts. Not in the slow, reluctant way of heavy creams, but in the way that suggests the formula was engineered to transition from solid to absorbed in under ten seconds. What it leaves behind is a velvety, slightly satin finish — not dewy enough to look wet, not matte enough to look flat. It’s the finish of skin that’s simply well-moisturized.
The ingredient list tells a story of accessible luxury rather than cutting-edge innovation. Shea butter and squalane do the heavy lifting on the emollient front, creating a lipid-rich base that smooths over dry patches and fine texture. Sodium hyaluronate pulls in water from the environment, and panthenol — the B5 vitamin that dermatologists have been quietly championing for decades — strengthens the skin barrier from within. The multivitamin angle comes from added vitamin C (as magnesium ascorbyl phosphate), vitamin E (tocopheryl acetate), and beta-carotene, though it’s worth noting these appear further down the ingredient list than the marketing might suggest. They’re present and accounted for, contributing antioxidant support, but this isn’t a vitamin C treatment in disguise. It’s a moisturizer with vitamins, emphasis on the former.
As a primer, this is where the Vitamin Enriched Face Base genuinely earns its reputation. Foundation applies more evenly over it. Makeup lasts longer. Dry patches don’t telegraph through powder. The silicone base (cyclopentasiloxane and dimethicone crosspolymer) creates a smooth, grip-like surface that holds onto pigment without the slippery, plasticky feel that some dedicated primers leave behind. For anyone who’s ever applied foundation and watched it separate over their nose within two hours, this product is the antidote.
Then there’s the scent — and this is where the Vitamin Enriched Face Base will either seal the deal or lose you entirely. Grapefruit peel oil and geranium flower oil create a light, citrusy-floral fragrance that fans describe as “uplifting” and “spa-like.” It fades within a minute. But the ingredient list also reveals limonene, citronellol, geraniol, and linalool — EU-regulated fragrance allergens that are a genuine concern for sensitive skin. In 2026, when fragrance-free formulations are becoming the industry standard, the inclusion of essential oils feels like the one area where the formula’s age shows.
The jar packaging is the other anachronism. Glass is weighty and attractive, and there’s something undeniably satisfying about the ritual of unscrewing a Bobbi Brown jar. But without a pump or even an included spatula, you’re dipping fingers into the product daily, introducing bacteria with each use. For a product marketed partly on its vitamin content, a pump would better preserve the stability of those antioxidants.
Performance-wise, this product delivers most convincingly for dry to normal skin types in the morning routine. It’s too rich for oily skin and contains comedogenic ingredients (notably PPG-2 Myristyl Ether Propionate) that can trigger breakouts in acne-prone users — a fact confirmed by a meaningful minority of reviewers across retailers. If you’re breakout-prone, this isn’t the one.
The value proposition requires honest assessment. At $69 for 1.7 ounces, this is a premium moisturizer competing against brands with more sophisticated active delivery systems. But it’s also replacing two products — moisturizer and primer — which softens the per-use cost. The 3.4 oz jumbo at $113 offers significantly better value for committed users. And the fact that a pea-sized amount covers the full face means the standard jar lasts a solid two to three months.
What keeps the Vitamin Enriched Face Base relevant after a quarter century isn’t any single ingredient revelation — it’s the execution. The texture, the wear, the way it makes foundation behave. These are experiential qualities that don’t show up on an ingredient label but show up in a bathroom mirror at 6 PM when your makeup still looks like it did at 8 AM. For dry-skinned makeup lovers who don’t react to fragrance, this remains one of the most satisfying morning moisturizers on the market. It’s not trying to treat your skin concerns. It’s trying to make your skin look beautiful under makeup, and at that specific job, it’s been doing it longer and better than almost anything else available.
Formula
Texture
The texture is the first thing that earns your attention. It’s a rich cream that somehow feels lightweight — a contradiction that the combination of shea butter, squalane, and cyclopentasiloxane manages to pull off with remarkable grace. You scoop a pea-sized amount from the jar (more on that jar in a moment), press it between your palms, and press it into your skin. It melts. Not in the slow, reluctant way of heavy creams, but in the way that suggests the formula was engineered to transition from solid to absorbed in under ten seconds. What it leaves behind is a velvety, slightly satin finish — not dewy enough to look wet, not matte enough to look flat. It’s the finish of skin that’s simply well-moisturized.
Scent
Then there’s the scent — and this is where the Vitamin Enriched Face Base will either seal the deal or lose you entirely. Grapefruit peel oil and geranium flower oil create a light, citrusy-floral fragrance that fans describe as “uplifting” and “spa-like.” It fades within a minute. But the ingredient list also reveals limonene, citronellol, geraniol, and linalool — EU-regulated fragrance allergens that are a genuine concern for sensitive skin. In 2026, when fragrance-free formulations are becoming the industry standard, the inclusion of essential oils feels like the one area where the formula’s age shows.
Packaging
The jar packaging is the other anachronism. Glass is weighty and attractive, and there’s something undeniably satisfying about the ritual of unscrewing a Bobbi Brown jar. But without a pump or even an included spatula, you’re dipping fingers into the product daily, introducing bacteria with each use. For a product marketed partly on its vitamin content, a pump would better preserve the stability of those antioxidants.
Best for
Performance-wise, this product delivers most convincingly for dry to normal skin types in the morning routine. It’s too rich for oily skin and contains comedogenic ingredients (notably PPG-2 Myristyl Ether Propionate) that can trigger breakouts in acne-prone users — a fact confirmed by a meaningful minority of reviewers across retailers. If you’re breakout-prone, this isn’t the one.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Water/Aqua/Eau, Cyclopentasiloxane, Bis-Diglyceryl Polyacyladipate-2, Butylene Glycol, PPG-2 Myristyl Ether Propionate, Cetyl Alcohol, PEG-40 Stearate, Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea Butter), Squalane, Glyceryl Stearate, Sorbitan Stearate, Epilobium Angustifolium Extract, Yeast Extract/Faex/Extrait De Levure, Beta-Carotene, Sodium Hyaluronate, Citrus Grandis (Grapefruit) Peel Oil, Tocopheryl Acetate, Methyl Glucose Sesquistearate, Pelargonium Graveolens (Geranium) Flower Oil, Dimethicone Crosspolymer, Acrylates/C10-30 Alkyl Acrylate Crosspolymer, Carbomer, PEG-20 Methyl Glucose Sesquistearate, C12-15 Alkyl Ethylhexanoate, Tetrasodium EDTA, Sodium Hydroxide, Panthenol, Magnesium Ascorbyl Phosphate, Limonene, Citronellol, Geraniol, Linalool, Chlorphenesin, Phenoxyethanol
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
The Vitamin Enriched Face Base uses well-studied emollients and humectants instead of novel bioactive delivery for its hydrating architecture. Shea butter (Butyrospermum parkii) has documented anti-inflammatory properties from its triterpene content. A 2018 review in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences by Lin et al. confirmed shea butter repairs barrier function and reduces inflammation markers in topical application. Squalane, a hydrogenated form of the skin's natural squalene, increases skin moisture content by up to 40% and reduces transepidermal water loss in clinical evaluations published in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology.
The humectant layer uses sodium hyaluronate, a low-molecular-weight form of hyaluronic acid. A 2011 randomized controlled trial by Pavicic et al. in the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology tested topical HA formulations of various molecular weights on 65 women over 60 days; it showed significant improvements in skin hydration and elasticity compared to placebo.
Panthenol (pro-vitamin B5) supports the barrier from within. Camargo et al. published findings in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology (2011) showing that 1% and 5% panthenol concentrations produced statistically significant decreases in transepidermal water loss after 30 days of use. In this formula, panthenol works with lipid components to maintain the moisture hyaluronic acid pulls in.
The antioxidant package includes magnesium ascorbyl phosphate (MAP), a stable vitamin C derivative. MAP sits low in this formula's INCI list, suggesting supportive rather than treatment-level concentrations. Research by Inui and Itami in Experimental Dermatology (2015) confirmed MAP regulates inflammatory biomarkers in skin cells, though optimal brightening effects typically require concentrations above 5%.
References
- Anti-Inflammatory and Skin Barrier Repair Effects of Topical Application of Some Plant Oils — International Journal of Molecular Sciences (2018)
- Efficacy of cream-based novel formulations of hyaluronic acid of different molecular weights in anti-wrinkle treatment — Journal of Drugs in Dermatology (2011)
- Skin moisturizing effects of panthenol-based formulations — Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology (2011)
- Magnesium ascorbyl phosphate regulates the expression of inflammatory biomarkers in cultured sebocytes — Experimental Dermatology (2015)
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists view the Vitamin Enriched Face Base as a well-formulated moisturizer-primer hybrid for dry to normal skin types. The combination of shea butter, squalane, and panthenol creates a robust hydrating matrix that board-certified dermatologists frequently recommend for patients with dry, flaky skin under makeup. However, dermatologists note that the natural essential oils (grapefruit and geranium) and their fragrance allergens make this a poor choice for patients with contact dermatitis, eczema, or fragrance sensitivity. The vitamin C and E content provides antioxidant support but is not sufficient to replace dedicated treatment products for hyperpigmentation or photoaging.
Where it fits in your routine.
Cleanse your skin and apply serums first. Warm a pea-sized amount between your palms. Press it into your face and neck, moving from the center outward. Wait 30-60 seconds for absorption before you apply sunscreen or makeup. Use it as a standalone moisturizer on no-makeup days. Apply to slightly damp skin to maximize the hyaluronic acid's moisture-binding effect.
At $69 for 1.7 oz, the Vitamin Enriched Face Base is a prestige product. The per-ounce cost is high, but the Vitamin Enriched Face Base replaces both a moisturizer and primer, lowering the effective daily cost. The 3.4 oz jumbo at $113 saves users roughly 33% per ounce. As a legacy product from a luxury brand under the Estée Lauder umbrella, the price reflects proven performance and brand positioning. The ingredient list is quality but similar to mid-range alternatives; the premium pays for texture engineering and a 25-year track record.
Dry to normal skin types who wear makeup regularly and want one product to hydrate and prime. Best for those who want a fast morning routine and will pay more for a proven, thick feel.
Oily or acne-prone skin types should look elsewhere — the thick formula and comedogenic ingredients cause congestion. People with fragrance sensitivity should avoid this because of the grapefruit oil, geranium oil, and multiple fragrance allergens.
Product details.
Thick and cushiony but lightweight — it melts into skin with a silky, velvety feel that does not sit on top or feel heavy.
A light blend of grapefruit and geranium essential oils. The scent is noticeable on application but fades fast. It uses 100% naturally derived fragrance.
Bobbi Brown uses a minimalist glass jar with a screw-top lid. It comes in 0.5 oz mini, 1.7 oz standard, and 3.4 oz jumbo sizes. No spatula is included.
The first application provides immediate silky smoothness. Skin feels plumped and primed within seconds. There is no adjustment period. The grapefruit-geranium scent is noticeable but fades within a minute.
2-3 months with daily morning use on face and neck
12 months
All Year
The backstory.
Bobbi Brown created this product in 2001 for backstage use — she needed something that would hydrate models' skin and create a flawless base for foundation in a single step. It became the brand's bestselling skincare product, with a jar reportedly sold every 24 seconds globally, and has remained essentially unchanged for a quarter century.
About Bobbi Brown
Legacy Brand (20+ years)Bobbi Brown Cosmetics launched in 1991 and Estée Lauder Companies acquired it in 1995. The brand has over three decades in prestige beauty and uses dermatologist-tested formulations based on an artist-driven, skin-first philosophy.
Common myths.
This product replaces a dedicated moisturizer entirely.
For normal to dry skin in the morning, use it as a standalone moisturizer-primer. Very dry skin in winter may still need a thicker night cream; this product does not replace PM moisturizing.
The vitamins in this formula provide anti-aging benefits.
The vitamin C and E derivatives sit low on the INCI list. They work as antioxidant support rather than primary treatment actives. This is a hydrating primer first; the vitamin benefits are a bonus, not a clinical treatment.
FAQ.
Can you use Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base without makeup?
It works well as a primer, but the shea butter, squalane, and hyaluronic acid formula also makes it a complete moisturizer. Many users wear it alone on no-makeup days for a smooth, hydrated finish.
Is Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base good for oily skin?
The shea butter and squalane provide heavy moisture, which may be too thick for very oily skin. The formula contains PPG-2 Myristyl Ether Propionate, which has moderate comedogenic potential. Oily or acne-prone users should patch test first.
Does Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base have SPF?
This product does not contain sunscreen. Apply a separate SPF product over it before sun exposure. Its satin finish layers well under most sunscreens without pilling.
What does Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base smell like?
Natural grapefruit peel oil and geranium flower oil give it a light, uplifting scent. This citrusy-floral fragrance is noticeable during application but fades in about a minute. Those sensitive to fragrance should note it contains limonene, citronellol, geraniol, and linalool.
Is Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base worth the price?
At $69 for 1.7 oz, this is a premium product. It replaces both moisturizer and primer, and a small amount lasts a long time. The 3.4 oz jumbo at $113 has better per-ounce value. Its 25-year track record shows the formula works for the right skin type.
Can you use retinol with Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base?
Yes, but use retinol at night and this product in the morning. The shea butter and panthenol in this formula soothe skin adjusting to retinol. This makes it a good AM companion to an evening retinoid routine.
How long does a jar of Bobbi Brown Vitamin Enriched Face Base last?
The standard 1.7 oz jar lasts 2-3 months if used every morning on the face and neck. A pea-sized amount covers the full face, so the jar format lasts a long time.
What the community says.
"Creates an exceptionally smooth canvas for makeup"
"Rich texture absorbs quickly without greasiness"
"Effectively hydrates dry skin throughout the day"
"Pleasant uplifting grapefruit-geranium scent"
"Simplifies routine by combining moisturizer and primer"
"Keeps makeup from flaking or separating all day"
"Can cause breakouts in acne-prone skin"
"Natural fragrance oils may irritate sensitive users"
"Jar packaging is less hygienic than a pump"
"High price point for the amount of product"