PM Facial Moisturizing Lotion
Nighttime Skincare Essential
Pros & cons.
- +Niacinamide at ~4% provides active barrier strengthening, tone correction, and sebum regulation
- +Three ceramides with MVE sustained-release technology optimized for overnight barrier repair
- +Ultra-lightweight, oil-free formula suitable for oily, combination, and acne-prone skin
- +Universally recommended by dermatologists as a companion to retinoids and active treatments
- +Fragrance-free, paraben-free, and non-comedogenic with exceptional tolerability
- +15+ years and 90,000+ reviews provide unmatched real-world validation
- +Cradle to Cradle Silver certification for environmental sustainability
- +Synergistic niacinamide-ceramide-phytosphingosine system addresses barrier repair from multiple angles
- −Dimethicone can cause pilling when layered with silicone-based serums or sunscreens
- −3 oz tube runs out in 6-8 weeks — feels small relative to price at $15-20
- −May not be moisturizing enough as a standalone for very dry skin types
- −2020 reformulation texture differs slightly from the beloved original formula
- −Pump dispenser occasionally clogs or malfunctions with regular use
The full review.
There’s a particular kind of product that achieves ubiquity not through marketing brilliance or influencer campaigns but through the relentless accumulation of quiet competence. The CeraVe PM Facial Moisturizing Lotion is that product. Walk into any dermatologist’s office in America, ask for a nighttime moisturizer recommendation for literally any skin type, and there’s a better-than-even chance this will be the answer. It has been the answer since 2010, and 90,000-plus reviews later, no one has found a compelling reason to change it.
The formula reads like a dermatology textbook’s wish list rendered as a product. Niacinamide — listed fourth, at an estimated 4% concentration — is the ingredient that elevates this from a basic moisturizer to an active treatment. At this concentration, niacinamide strengthens the skin barrier by stimulating endogenous ceramide biosynthesis, regulates sebum production, calms inflammation, and gradually evens skin tone. It’s one of the most well-studied and universally beneficial skincare actives in existence, and its inclusion here is what makes the PM Lotion fundamentally different from every other CeraVe moisturizer.
The ceramide trio (NP, AP, EOP) is delivered through CeraVe’s MVE technology, which releases the lipids gradually over hours rather than delivering them all at once. During sleep — when the skin’s repair mechanisms are most active and transepidermal water loss peaks — this sustained delivery provides a continuous supply of barrier-building lipids exactly when the skin needs them most. Cholesterol and phytosphingosine complete the physiological lipid profile, ensuring the ceramides integrate properly into the skin’s lipid matrix.
What makes the niacinamide-ceramide pairing particularly clever is the synergy. The exogenous ceramides in the formula patch the barrier immediately. The niacinamide signals the skin to produce more ceramides on its own. And the phytosphingosine serves as a ceramide precursor, providing raw material for that endogenous production. It’s a three-pronged approach to barrier repair that addresses the problem from multiple angles simultaneously.
Texture
The texture is legendary in the skincare community for a reason. Ultra-lightweight, oil-free, and non-greasy, it absorbs in about sixty to ninety seconds and leaves a velvety, satin finish that feels like nothing on the skin. For oily and combination skin types who resist moisturizer because they associate it with heaviness and shine, this is the product that changes their mind. It provides genuine hydration — glycerin and sodium hyaluronate handle the humectant duties — without any of the sensory compromises that make people skip this step.
Scent
The fragrance-free formula is a masterclass in restraint. No faint botanical scent to seem “natural,” no essential oils for aromatherapy appeal, no chemical fragrance masked by “parfum” at the bottom of the INCI list. Just nothing. For sensitive skin, post-procedure skin, retinoid-irritated skin, or anyone who has developed a contact allergy to fragrance compounds, this kind of genuinely unscented formula is non-negotiable.
Pairs Well With
As a companion to active treatments, the PM Lotion has few equals. Dermatologists recommend it alongside retinoids, AHAs, BHAs, and prescription acne treatments because it supports the barrier without interfering with the active. The niacinamide actually buffers some of the irritation these treatments cause, and the ceramides repair the barrier disruption that aggressive actives inevitably create. If you’re on tretinoin and struggling with dryness and irritation, this is the moisturizer that lets you stay on treatment.
Common Complaints
Pilling is the PM Lotion’s most discussed limitation, and it’s a legitimate one. The dimethicone in the formula can ball up when layered over silicone-based serums or under certain sunscreens. The solution is straightforward — allow each layer to fully absorb, use slightly less product, and consider water-based products in adjacent routine steps — but it’s an inconvenience that a product this popular should have solved by now.
The tube size is the other persistent complaint. At 3 ounces for approximately $15-20 (depending on retailer), you’re getting six to eight weeks of nightly use. That’s roughly $10-13 per month, which is reasonable by any objective standard, but the tube itself feels small in hand relative to the price — a psychological friction that larger CeraVe products don’t create. A 2 oz size is also available for even less, but the per-ounce economics are worse.
Best for
For very dry skin, the PM Lotion may not be sufficient as a standalone nighttime moisturizer. Its lightness — its greatest strength for oily and combination types — means it can’t provide the heavy-duty occlusion that genuinely parched skin requires at night. The solution is simple: layer it under the CeraVe Moisturizing Cream, use a hyaluronic acid serum underneath, or apply it as a first moisture layer followed by an occlusive like CeraVe Healing Ointment on dry patches.
Packaging
The Cradle to Cradle Silver certification adds a sustainability dimension that most drugstore products can’t claim, indicating responsible practices across material health, product circularity, clean air, water stewardship, and social fairness.
After fifteen years, the CeraVe PM Facial Moisturizing Lotion has proven something that’s rare in skincare: you don’t need to be complicated to be essential. The formula is clear-eyed about what nighttime facial skin needs — barrier lipids, barrier-boosting actives, hydration, and nothing that will cause problems — and delivers exactly that in a lightweight package that disappears into the skin. It’s not the most exciting product on the shelf. It might be the most important one.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Aqua/Water/Eau, Glycerin, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, Niacinamide, Cetearyl Alcohol, Potassium Phosphate, Ceramide NP, Ceramide AP, Ceramide EOP, Carbomer, Dimethicone, Ceteareth-20, Behentrimonium Methosulfate, Sodium Lauroyl Lactylate, Sodium Hyaluronate, Cholesterol, Phenoxyethanol, Disodium EDTA, Dipotassium Phosphate, Caprylyl Glycol, Phytosphingosine, Xanthan Gum, Polyglyceryl-3 Diisostearate, Ethylhexylglycerin
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
The PM Facial Moisturizing Lotion uses a dual-pathway approach to barrier repair. It combines exogenous ceramide delivery with niacinamide-induced endogenous ceramide production.
Tanno et al. (British Journal of Dermatology, 2000) established that topical niacinamide increases production of ceramides, cholesterol, and free fatty acids in the stratum corneum. This matters for this formula, which also includes exogenous ceramides (NP, AP, EOP), cholesterol, and phytosphingosine — the same lipids niacinamide upregulates. This creates a positive feedback loop: topical ceramides provide immediate barrier support while niacinamide signals the skin to produce more of its own.
The MVE delivery system, CeraVe's proprietary technology, encapsulates barrier lipids in concentric vesicle layers for sequential release. This sustained delivery matches the skin's nighttime circadian biology. Research shows transepidermal water loss increases at night, while skin barrier repair mechanisms — including lamellar body secretion and lipid synthesis — peak during sleep. By releasing ceramides gradually throughout the night, MVE technology provides a continuous supply of barrier-building lipids to support these endogenous repair processes.
Bissett et al. (Dermatologic Surgery, 2005) documented niacinamide's benefits for facial skin appearance, including reduced fine lines, improved elasticity, reduced hyperpigmentation, and decreased sallowness — all relevant to a nighttime facial moisturizer for long-term use.
The physiological lipid trio (ceramides, cholesterol, fatty acids) follows principles from Man et al. (Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1996), who showed an equimolar mixture of these lipids optimally accelerates barrier repair. Including all three ceramide subtypes plus cholesterol and phytosphingosine ensures the topical lipids mimic the skin's natural stratum corneum composition.
References
- Nicotinamide increases biosynthesis of ceramides as well as other stratum corneum lipids to improve the epidermal permeability barrier — British Journal of Dermatology (2000)
- Niacinamide: A B vitamin that improves aging facial skin appearance — Dermatologic Surgery (2005)
- Optimization of physiological lipid mixtures for barrier repair — Journal of Investigative Dermatology (1996)
Dermatologist Perspective
The CeraVe PM Facial Moisturizing Lotion is unique in dermatological practice: almost every dermatologist recommends it regardless of a patient's primary skin concern. Board-certified dermatologist Dr. Ted Lain endorses its barrier-supporting formulation, and Dr. Andrea Suarez (Dr. Dray) includes it on her recommendation list. Dermatologists use this product alongside prescription retinoids and acne treatments — niacinamide buffers treatment-induced irritation while ceramides repair the barrier disruption caused by aggressive actives. The oil-free, non-comedogenic formula is safe for acne patients, and the lack of potential photosensitizers makes it appropriate for nighttime use. For patients hesitant to add a moisturizer, the ultra-lightweight texture avoids the "too heavy" objection that often prevents compliance.
Where it fits in your routine.
Cleanse skin and apply treatment serums (vitamin C, retinol, AHA, BHA), then dispense one to two pumps onto fingertips. Smooth the lotion across the face and neck using upward motions. Wait 60-90 seconds for full absorption. If using retinol or tretinoin, wait 5-10 minutes after the retinoid application before applying this lotion. Dry skin types can layer a hyaluronic acid serum underneath or a heavier cream on top for more moisture.
At roughly $15-20 for 3 ounces (prices vary by retailer, but Target and Walmart often sell for under $15), the PM Lotion offers high ingredient quality for the price. The niacinamide-ceramide combination with MVE delivery technology costs $40-60 from prestige brands. One 3 oz tube lasts 6-8 weeks with nightly use, making the monthly cost about $8-13 — less than one specialty coffee per week. The 2 oz size has a lower entry price. CeraVe's 20-year pedigree, dermatologist development, and Cradle to Cradle certification show the price covers formulation investment and sustainable practices instead of brand markup.
Most people looking for a nighttime facial moisturizer. It works for oily, combination, and normal skin types that want barrier support without heaviness. It is useful for anyone using retinoids, AHAs, BHAs, or other active treatments that compromise the barrier. First-time skincare users can use it as a universally recommended starting moisturizer.
Very dry skin types who need heavy-duty nighttime moisture should consider the CeraVe Moisturizing Cream instead, or layer this underneath a richer cream. Those who experience pilling with silicone-containing products may find the dimethicone frustrating in their layering routine. If you need SPF in your moisturizer for a simplified morning routine, the CeraVe AM Facial Moisturizing Lotion SPF 30 is the better choice.
Product details.
Ultra-lightweight lotion with a cream-gel hybrid texture that leans creamy. It is thinner than the Moisturizing Cream but not watery. It spreads easily and absorbs in 1-2 minutes, leaving skin velvety and hydrated.
Fragrance-free with a faint, clean base scent that vanishes in seconds. It is essentially unscented during use.
Compact pump bottle uses CeraVe's signature white-and-blue design. It comes in 2 oz and 3 oz sizes. The pump format is hygienic but sometimes clogs. The small tube size is travel-friendly and works as a dedicated face product, but it runs out in 6-8 weeks.
The first application shows a lightweight lotion despite its high ingredient density. It absorbs fast and leaves a velvety, skin-like finish. Once fully absorbed (give it 60-90 seconds), there is no greasiness or tackiness. The absence of fragrance is immediate. It causes no tingling or stinging, even on freshly treated or post-retinoid skin.
6-8 weeks with nightly facial use
12 months
All Year
The backstory.
CeraVe launched the PM Facial Moisturizing Lotion in 2010, five years after the brand's founding, as the first face-specific moisturizer in their lineup. Adding niacinamide to the ceramide-MVE system was a strategic decision — niacinamide boosts the skin's own ceramide production, creating a synergistic effect with the exogenous ceramides in the formula. The product quickly became one of the most universally recommended nighttime moisturizers in dermatology, prized for its ability to support barrier health during the overnight repair window without interfering with active treatments.
About CeraVe
Dermatologists helped develop CeraVe in 2005. It is the #1 dermatologist-recommended skincare brand in the U.S. Peer-reviewed research backs its formulations, and multiple products carry the National Eczema Association Seal of Acceptance. *Established Brand (5–20 years)*
Common myths.
You can only use this moisturizer at night because it's labeled 'PM.'
The PM designation is a CeraVe recommendation, not a limitation. Many users and dermatologists use this lotion morning and evening. It lacks SPF, unlike the AM version, so morning use requires a separate sunscreen. The lightweight texture and lack of photosensitizing ingredients make it suitable for daytime use.
Do not use the niacinamide in this product with vitamin C.
The vitamin C-niacinamide conflict is a skincare myth. It stems from a misinterpreted 1960s study using extreme temperatures irrelevant to skincare. Modern formulations of both ingredients work together; niacinamide's barrier-strengthening effects complement vitamin C's antioxidant protection. Many dermatologists recommend using them together.
FAQ.
Can I use CeraVe PM Lotion in the morning too?
Yes — this lotion works well morning and evening despite the PM label. It lacks SPF, which is why it is designated PM. If you use it in the morning, apply a separate sunscreen over it. The lightweight texture layers well under most sunscreens.
Is this moisturizer good for oily and acne-prone skin?
This is a top moisturizer for oily and acne-prone skin. The oil-free, non-comedogenic formula hydrates and supports the barrier without adding shine or clogging pores. Niacinamide regulates sebum production and calms acne-related inflammation. Dermatologists frequently recommend it for patients using acne treatments like retinoids and benzoyl peroxide.
Why does CeraVe PM pill on my skin?
Pilling happens when this product's dimethicone interacts with silicone-based serums or sunscreens applied underneath or on top. To prevent pilling, let each layer absorb fully before the next (wait 2-3 minutes between steps), use less product, or apply to slightly damp skin. Water-based serums layer better with this formula than heavy silicone serums.
What's the difference between CeraVe PM and AM Lotion?
The PM Lotion uses niacinamide to support the barrier and correct tone but lacks SPF — it works for nighttime use with active treatments. The AM Lotion has SPF 30 broad-spectrum sun protection but no niacinamide — it works for morning use as a sunscreen-moisturizer hybrid. These complementary products form a day-and-night CeraVe regimen.
Can I use CeraVe PM with retinol or tretinoin?
This is a top moisturizer choice for retinoid users. The ceramide-niacinamide formula supports the barrier during retinoid-induced irritation, and the lightweight texture does not dilute the retinoid's efficacy. Apply your retinoid first, wait 5-10 minutes for absorption, then apply the PM Lotion on top.
Has the CeraVe PM formula changed?
Yes — it underwent reformulation in 2018 and 2020. The main change was removing parabens (methylparaben and propylparaben) from the preservative system. Some long-time users say the current formula has a different texture. The core active ingredients (niacinamide, three ceramides, hyaluronic acid) are the same.
Is this enough moisture for dry skin?
The PM Lotion hydrates moderately dry skin well, especially if you layer a hyaluronic acid serum underneath. For very dry skin, the PM Lotion feels too light as a standalone nighttime moisturizer. Use the CeraVe Moisturizing Cream or layer the PM Lotion under a heavier cream or occlusive for extra moisture.
What the community says.
"Ultra-lightweight, non-greasy formula absorbs quickly without residue"
"Effective for all skin types including oily and acne-prone"
"Niacinamide visibly improves skin tone, texture, and barrier health"
"Fragrance-free and gentle enough for the most sensitive skin"
"Exceptional value for the quality of the ceramide-niacinamide formula"
"Layers perfectly with retinoids and other active treatments"
"Can pill when layered over certain serums or under some sunscreens"
"3 oz tube feels small for $15-20 and runs out quickly"
"2020 reformulation feels slightly different from the beloved original formula"
"May not be moisturizing enough for very dry skin as a standalone"
"Pump dispenser can malfunction or clog with regular use"