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Eminence Organic Skin Care Clear Skin Probiotic Moisturizer 2 oz jar

Clear Skin Probiotic Moisturizer

Herbal Acne Cream

clean beauty Paraben Free Cruelty Free
60/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
6.4
Value for money
6.2
Suitability breadth
4.2
Irritation risk
Med
$54.00
2 fl oz
4.2
500 customer ratings (Amazon)
Data confidence
High confidence
500+ aggregated reviews · INCI confirmed
Made in
Hungary
Launched
2010
PAO
12 mo.
after opening
Alex Brufsky
Alex Brufsky Founder & Editor
Analysis by DermFND · Last verified May 2026 · Methodology
Verified reviewer
01 · Quick read

Pros & cons.

What we love
  • +Lighter, more mattifying finish than typical Eminence creams
  • +Kaolin clay contributes genuine oil absorption
  • +Cruelty-free, paraben-free, and organic-sourced
  • +Pleasant herbal sensory experience for spa lovers
  • +Works reasonably as a moisturizer for mild, occasional breakouts
  • +Willow bark, horsetail, and beetroot extracts add antioxidant support
What to know
  • Probiotic branding is marketing rather than biological reality
  • Willow bark salicin is too weak for clinical acne benefit
  • Contains moderately comedogenic corn germ oil, shea, and beeswax
  • Lavender, peppermint, and grapefruit can sensitize reactive skin
  • Expensive compared with dermatologist-developed acne moisturizers
  • Yogurt, dairy, and bee-derived ingredients make it non-vegan
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

The Eminence Clear Skin Probiotic Moisturizer is an interesting case study in how brand positioning and formulation can drift out of sync. The label promises two things: probiotic skincare and acne-friendly hydration. The ingredient list delivers neither of those in a particularly convincing way, but it also does enough real work to explain why it has a loyal following among aesthetician clients and spa-skincare shoppers. Untangling the mismatch is basically the whole review.

Start with the probiotic claim. Probiotic skincare is one of the more hyped categories of the last decade, and the scientific underpinning for leave-on topical probiotics has gotten progressively shakier the more closely researchers have looked. Live probiotic cultures don’t survive the preservation, pH adjustment, and emulsification that finished skincare products undergo; they’re inactivated before the jar is ever sealed. What modern probiotic skincare usually means, in practice, is postbiotic filtrates and ferments — things like Lactobacillus ferment lysate or Bifida ferment — which are metabolic byproducts rather than live cultures. This Eminence formula doesn’t contain any of those. What it contains is yogurt, which contributes lactic acid, some trace proteins, and mild humectancy. The probiotic name is essentially a branding decision, not a biological description of what’s happening on your skin.

Then there’s the acne claim, which rests primarily on willow bark extract. Willow bark contains salicin, a precursor compound that can theoretically convert to salicylic acid in skin. The catch is that the yield is low — far below the 0.5-2% salicylic acid concentrations that pharmaceutical BHA products use, and nowhere near the dose that produces the clinically well-documented effects on comedones, clogged pores, and inflammatory acne. The formula also lists salicylic acid directly, but near the bottom of the INCI, which means it’s present at preservative-level concentrations, not therapeutic ones. If you have real acne, this product will not replace a dedicated BHA serum, benzoyl peroxide wash, or prescription retinoid. It’s a gentle assist at best.

So what is it actually doing? A few honest things. The kaolin clay gives the cream a genuinely lighter, more mattifying finish than most Eminence moisturizers, which is a real improvement for combination skin that wants hydration without the slickness of a heavy botanical cream. The horsetail, beetroot, and willow bark extracts contribute mild astringent and antioxidant support. The pantothenol and aloe provide some soothing and humectancy. For someone with mild, occasional breakouts — the type that responds to essentially any non-heavy moisturizer — this cream can slot in as the hydrating step of a routine without obvious downsides. For that user, at that intensity of acne, it’s fine.

The problems start when the label gets taken literally. The formula contains corn germ oil, shea butter, beeswax, and cetearyl alcohol — a quartet that is moderately comedogenic for very acne-prone skin. Combined with lavender, peppermint, grapefruit peel, and other fragrant plant extracts that can sensitize reactive skin, this is an acne moisturizer that carries real risks for the very population it’s marketed to. People with moderate acne, sensitive skin, or active breakouts should probably look elsewhere; the performance-to-risk ratio just doesn’t line up.

Price-wise, at roughly $54 for 2 ounces, it’s priced like a prestige spa product for what is, mechanically, a lightly-mattified botanical moisturizer. You’re paying for the Eminence brand, the organic positioning, the glass jar, the aesthetician-trade credibility, and the spa sensory experience. You’re not paying for clinical acne efficacy that exceeds drugstore alternatives. A simple niacinamide-and-ceramide moisturizer from a dermatologist-developed pharmacy brand will typically deliver more reliable acne-friendly results at a fraction of the cost.

The honest recommendation is narrow but legitimate. If you love Eminence, tolerate botanicals well, have combination skin with occasional breakouts rather than active acne, and value the spa aesthetic of your routine as part of the experience, this cream can be a pleasant addition. If you have real acne that needs real intervention, or sensitive skin that reacts to fragranced plant extracts, or a budget that demands ingredient density per dollar, this product is asking you to pay more than it can deliver. The gap between the branding and the biology is what keeps this from being a stronger recommendation.

03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
Willow bark contains salicin, a precursor compound that can convert to salicylic acid in skin at low levels. In this moisturizer, it's the star 'natural BHA' claim, though the salicylic acid yield from willow bark is typically far below the 0.5-2% concentrations that give synthetic salicylic acid its clinical effects on acne. The formula also contains listed salicylic acid lower in the INCI as a preservative booster.
Limited
Caution
Yogurt FLAGGED
The 'probiotic' in the name is yogurt, which is typically inactivated during formulation — meaning there are no live probiotic cultures in a preserved leave-on cream. What yogurt does contribute is lactic acid, trace amino acids, and a mild humectant effect. The actual microbiome-adjacent benefits some brands attribute to probiotic skincare generally come from postbiotics and fermented filtrates, not from yogurt in a finished moisturizer.
Limited
Caution
A mild absorbent clay that helps mattify the finish and soaks up some surface sebum. In this formula it's responsible for the slightly matte, less shiny finish compared with most rich botanical creams, and it's what positions this product as being acne-friendly despite having plant oils and beeswax in the base.
Well Established
OK
Tea tree oil appears in related Clear Skin line products and has some clinical evidence for acne at 5% concentrations. Note: the published ingredient list for this specific moisturizer does not explicitly list tea tree oil — check current packaging if this is a specific concern.
Promising
OK
Provide the emollient cushion of the formula alongside beeswax and cetearyl alcohol. For acne-prone skin this is a mixed bag — shea and corn germ oil are moderately comedogenic-leaning and not ideal for very acne-prone users despite the product's 'clear skin' positioning.
Well Established
OK
Full INCI list

Aloe Barbadensis (Aloe) Juice, Cucumis Sativus (Cucumber) Juice, Salix Alba (Willow) Bark Extract, Rosa Canina (Rosehip) Seed Extract, Citrus Paradisi (Grapefruit) Peel Extract, Symphytum Officinale (Comfrey) Leaf Extract, Lavandula Angustifolia (Lavender) Flower Extract, Equisetum Arvense (Horsetail) Leaf Extract, Mentha Piperita (Peppermint) Leaf Extract, Calendula Officinalis Flower Extract, Beta Vulgaris (Beetroot) Extract, Vegetable Glycerin, Cetearyl Alcohol, Zea Mays (Corn) Germ Oil, Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea Butter), Propanediol (From Corn), Bolus Alba (Kaolin Clay), Panthenol (Provitamin B5), Cera Alba (Beeswax), Vegetable Glycerin, Yogurt, Sempervivum Tectorum (Stone Crop) Juice, Glyceryl Stearate, Cucumis Sativus (Cucumber) Extract, Cellulose, Calendula Officinalis Flower Oil, Tocopheryl Acetate (Vitamin E), Benzyl Alcohol, Salicylic Acid, Sorbic Acid

Product flags
✗ Fragrance Free ✗ Alcohol Free ✗ Oil Free ✓ Silicone Free ✓ Paraben Free ✓ Sulfate Free ✓ Cruelty Free ✗ Vegan ✗ Fungal Acne Safe
Potential irritants
Lavender Flower ExtractPeppermint Leaf ExtractGrapefruit Peel ExtractBenzyl AlcoholCalendula Flower OilCommon AllergensYogurt (dairy)Calendula (Asteraceae family)Beeswax
04 · Compatibility

Skin match.

Pairs well with
niacinamidehyaluronic-acid
Skin types
Best for
combinationnormal
Works for
oily
Not ideal for
sensitivedry
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

This moisturizer's acne claims rely on willow bark extract as a salicin source. Salicin is a glycoside that metabolizes to salicylic acid in vivo. Some topical studies show willow bark in cosmetic formulations has mild anti-inflammatory effects. Concentration is the clinical limitation. Pharmaceutical salicylic acid, used at 0.5-2% in over-the-counter acne treatments, treats comedonal acne by penetrating sebum-rich follicles and providing keratolytic action. Salicin yields from cosmetic willow bark extracts are typically several orders of magnitude lower. No published clinical trials show willow bark at these concentrations matches the efficacy of dedicated salicylic acid products for acne reduction. The probiotic claim lacks clinical support in a leave-on preserved cream. Topical probiotic skincare needs live cultures in short-shelf-life formulations or postbiotic lysates and ferments (such as Lactobacillus ferment lysate or Bifida ferment filtrate) to provide microbiome-related benefits. Yogurt in a preserved emulsion adds lactic acid and trace proteins but does not deliver functional live probiotics in therapeutic quantities. The formula provides mild oil absorption (kaolin), gentle antioxidant support (horsetail, beetroot, rosehip, grapefruit peel extracts), and basic emollient hydration (shea, corn germ oil, pantothenol). None of these mechanisms are serious acne interventions by modern clinical standards, but they make the product a reasonable moisturizer for skin that isn't actively breaking out.

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists generally view botanical acne moisturizers like this one as supporting skincare rather than therapeutic interventions. Board-certified dermatologists recommend dedicated salicylic acid, benzoyl peroxide, adapalene, or prescription retinoid routines as first-line acne treatments, using moisturizers to support the barrier and hydrate. This product can fill the moisturizer slot for patients with mild acne who tolerate botanicals well, but it is not a primary acne treatment. The main dermatologic concerns are the comedogenic-leaning base ingredients for very acne-prone patients and the fragrance load for patients with sensitive or reactive skin. A dermatologist-developed niacinamide-and-ceramide moisturizer is typically the more defensible recommendation for acne-prone skin in clinical practice.

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 Niacinamide serum
03 Eminence Organic Skin Care Clear Skin Probiotic Moisturizer This product
04 SPF
PM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 BHA serum
03 Eminence Organic Skin Care Clear Skin Probiotic Moisturizer This product
How to use

Apply a pea-sized amount to the face and neck after cleansing and treatment serums (BHA, niacinamide, or benzoyl peroxide). Massage gently. Use morning and night if tolerated. In the AM, follow with a broad-spectrum SPF. Patch test on the jawline for 2-3 weeks before full-face use — the essential oils and comedogenic-leaning base ingredients can cause unpredictable reactions in sensitive or acne-prone skin. If using with a dedicated BHA or prescription retinoid, apply those first and let them absorb fully.

Value assessment

At roughly $54 for 2 ounces, this cream costs as much as prestige products. The value comes from Eminence brand history, organic sourcing, and the spa sensory experience. It lacks clinical acne efficacy — dermatologist-developed moisturizers and benzoyl-peroxide or salicylic-acid products from pharmacy brands usually reduce acne better and cost much less. The price is defensible for shoppers who want organic, botanical, aesthetician-trade skincare with a lighter-finish Eminence cream. For shoppers optimizing for acne clearance per dollar, cheaper dermatologist-developed options are the better buy.

Who should buy

This moisturizer suits combination or normal skin with occasional, mild breakouts. It offers a spa-aesthetic botanical formula with mild oil absorption and a lighter finish than typical Eminence creams. It works for Eminence loyalists who tolerate botanicals and value the organic, aesthetician-trade positioning.

Who should skip

This formula won't clear moderate or active acne and may cause breakouts due to its comedogenic-leaning base. Skip this if you have sensitive, rosacea-prone, or reactive skin because the essential oils are risky. Also skip if you want clinical acne efficacy; dermatologist-developed options work better and cost less.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Texture

Light, slightly matte cream with a soft herbal slip

Scent

Herbal and botanical — lavender and peppermint dominate

Packaging

Glass jar with screw lid and outer cardboard box

First use

The first use feels lighter and more mattifying than a typical thick Eminence cream. Peppermint provides a faint cooling sensation. Patch test if your skin is reactive — lavender and peppermint can cause unexpected sensitivity.

How long it lasts

2-3 months with twice-daily face use

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

All Year

Finish
satinnon-greasynatural
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

Eminence launched the Clear Skin line in the early 2010s to serve the spa-skincare customer who wanted an acne-friendly option without leaving the brand's organic philosophy. The probiotic marketing predated most dermatologist discussion of the skin microbiome by several years, though the science behind leave-on probiotic cosmetics has since been shown to be substantially weaker than the marketing suggested.

About Eminence Organic Skin Care

Eminence Organic Skin Care is an Established Brand (5–20 years). Eminence started in 1958 in Hungary and sells widely in licensed aesthetician offices. The Clear Skin probiotic line launched years before the dermatologist-led skin microbiome conversation, combining botanical tradition with modern probiotic marketing.

Brand founded: 1958 · Product launched: 2010
09 · Setting the record straight

Common myths.

Myth

Yogurt in a moisturizer provides live probiotics to your skin.

Reality

Yogurt in a preserved leave-on cosmetic is almost certainly inactivated. Live probiotic cultures do not survive manufacturing or the preservative system. Yogurt provides lactic acid, protein fragments, and mild humectancy. Postbiotic filtrates and ferments support microbiome-related claims better, but this formula does not feature them.

Myth

Willow bark is a natural, gentler alternative to salicylic acid.

Reality

Willow bark has salicin, which converts to salicylic acid in vivo. However, topical cosmetic yields stay below the 0.5-2% salicylic acid concentrations used in pharmaceuticals to treat acne. Dedicated salicylic acid formulations work better for BHA effects on comedones and clogged pores.

10 · Common questions

FAQ.

Does this moisturizer really contain live probiotics?

No — the yogurt in the formula is part of a preserved cosmetic emulsion. Manufacturing inactivates any live cultures. Yogurt provides lactic acid and trace protein fragments. For probiotic skincare with more scientific support, use products with specific postbiotic filtrates like Bifida or Lactobacillus ferment lysates.

Is it strong enough to clear moderate acne?

This helps mild breakouts and occasional clogged pores. For moderate or persistent acne, the formula is likely under-dosed. The willow bark salicin yield is lower than salicylic acid concentrations in dedicated BHA products, and the formula lacks benzoyl peroxide or retinoid. A medicated acne routine outperforms this product for serious breakouts.

Will it break me out?

It can. The formula uses corn germ oil, shea butter, beeswax, and cetearyl alcohol, which are mildly comedogenic for very acne-prone skin. Patch test a small section of the jawline for 2-3 weeks before use.

Can I use it with a prescription retinoid?

You can, but not always ideally. Apply the retinoid first, let it absorb, then use this cream. The essential oils and willow bark combined with a retinoid increase irritation risk for sensitive skin — if you notice redness or stinging, swap for a simpler moisturizer.

Is it really natural acne treatment?

The ingredient list uses mostly plant-derived and organic components for clean beauty shoppers. However, 'natural' does not mean 'more effective' for acne. Dermatologist-developed formulas with synthetic actives work more reliably to reduce breakouts.

How does it compare to dermatologist-recommended acne moisturizers?

Dermatologist-developed acne moisturizers usually combine non-comedogenic ceramide bases with niacinamide or low-concentration salicylic acid. These cost less and have better clinical support for acne-prone skin. This cream's value comes from its spa aesthetic and organic positioning, not clinical acne efficacy.

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"Lightweight, less greasy than other Eminence creams"

"Pleasant herbal scent"

"Works for mild breakouts in non-reactive skin"

"Cruelty-free and spa-favorite positioning"

Common complaints

"Not strong enough for moderate acne"

"Essential oils irritate sensitive users"

"Expensive for a 2 oz jar"

"Comedogenic ingredients contradict acne positioning"

Notable endorsements
Widely carried in licensed aesthetician offices
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