Supple Preparation All-Over Lotion
Sensitive-Skin Face-and-Body MVP
Pros & cons.
- +Genuinely works on both face and body with a well-calibrated weight
- +High glycerin content provides lasting humectant hydration
- +Ceramide NP and beta-glucan add real barrier-repair and soothing credentials
- +Fragrance-free and gentle enough for sensitive reactive skin
- +Large 250ml pump delivers excellent per-ml value
- +Shea butter and jojoba give enough richness for dry body skin without greasy face feel
- +Absorbs without white cast on darker skin tones
- −Too rich for genuinely oily face skin
- −Not fungal-acne safe due to shea butter and plant oils
- −Not vegan — ceramide NP sourcing
- −Pump can dispense unevenly in the last 10% of the bottle
- −Too heavy for hot and humid summer climates
The full review.
There’s a reason most face-and-body lotions are disappointing. Face moisturizers are built for small dosing, lightweight absorption, and fast finish; body lotions are built for generous application, longer occlusive hold, and staying power on elbows and shins. Trying to make one formula do both usually means compromising on one end — either a face cream you can stretch over arms for about two days before giving up, or a body lotion that feels suffocating on your cheeks. Klairs’ Supple Preparation All-Over Lotion is one of a very small number of products that actually split the difference well, and understanding why is mostly about reading the second line of the INCI.
Glycerin sits at position two. In cosmetic chemistry, that means it’s present at a high enough concentration to do real hydration work — probably five to eight percent — which is meaningful because glycerin is one of the most reliable humectants in skincare and it doesn’t care whether you apply it to your face or your thighs. Skin is skin. The humectant mechanism is the same, and if you’ve ever wondered why CeraVe’s facial and body lotions can share so many ingredients, it’s because the underlying biology of water binding in the stratum corneum doesn’t change below the jawline. What changes is the occlusive load, and Klairs calibrated that load precisely.
The occlusive backbone comes from caprylic/capric triglyceride, cetyl ethylhexanoate, shea butter, and jojoba seed oil. Shea butter is the richest of these, and it’s the ingredient that lets the lotion perform on dry body skin where a plain facial gel would just evaporate. Jojoba sits alongside it, providing a wax ester profile that mimics human sebum and helps the lotion absorb without leaving a heavy film on darker skin tones. The silicone component — cyclopentasiloxane and dimethicone — adds slip and a soft dry-down that keeps the lotion from feeling sticky on the face. The combined effect is a medium-weight lotion that actually feels correct on both territories instead of being a compromise that feels wrong on both.
Then there’s the sensitive-skin cast. Beta-glucan, centella asiatica, aloe, portulaca, and scutellaria root extract layer soothing and anti-inflammatory support into the base, which matters because the whole Klairs brand identity is built around reactive and easily irritated skin. Ceramide NP, sitting lower on the INCI but still present at a functional level, provides the lipid repair mechanism that makes this lotion tolerable on compromised skin barriers. Sodium hyaluronate does its usual water-binding job. Even the botanical extract list — paeonia, nelumbium, anise, scutellaria — reads like a thoughtful choice rather than a marketing pile-on. Nothing here is there just for the INCI photo.
The daily use experience matches what the formula suggests on paper. On the face, the lotion spreads smoothly, absorbs within about a minute, and leaves a soft satin finish that works well under sunscreen in the morning and feels comforting without being heavy at night. On arms and legs — the places where body lotion actually gets tested — it delivers the lasting softness you want from a shea-based formula without the greasy film that makes you dread getting dressed afterward. Dry elbows and knees take a small additional dollop and respond within a few days. The 250ml pump bottle is generous, and even with twice-daily face-and-arms use, you’ll be looking at three to five months per bottle, which puts the per-use cost well below most dedicated facial moisturizers in the same quality tier.
Let’s be honest about the limitations. The shea butter content makes this too rich for genuinely oily faces, and the combination of shea and plant oils disqualifies it for anyone managing fungal acne. It’s not water-light enough for summer use in hot, humid climates — you’ll want something thinner then — but it’s one of the better winter moisturizers in this price tier. The product is not vegan, which Klairs doesn’t hide but isn’t loud about; the ceramide NP is the source of that caveat. The pump mechanism, which is otherwise excellent, can start dispensing unevenly in the last ten percent of the bottle — the classic ‘tip upside down and wait’ problem that plagues most wide-base pump packaging.
About Klairs
Brand-heritage honesty: Klairs has been around since 2010, which puts it solidly in the established tier by K-beauty standards. The brand has built its reputation specifically on sensitive-skin formulations over fifteen years, and the Supple Preparation line is one of the most recommended product families in sensitive-skin K-beauty discussions on forums and in dermatologist-adjacent content. This isn’t an indie brand you need to give the benefit of the doubt to — it’s a brand with a real track record that earned its way onto the shortlist for sensitive dry skin, and this lotion is one of the flagship reasons why.
Who Should Buy
Buy it if you want one lotion for face and body, you have dry-to-normal skin with a sensitive tendency, and you appreciate fragrance-free formulas with genuine ceramide content. Skip it if you have oily or fungal-acne-prone skin, you prefer gel-textured moisturizers, or you’re strict about vegan sourcing. It’s a rare product that actually earns its category description, which is maybe the highest compliment you can pay a multipurpose skincare item.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Water, Glycerin, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, Cetyl Ethylhexanoate, Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea) Butter, Simmondsia Chinensis (Jojoba) Seed Oil, Glyceryl Stearate, Cetyl Alcohol, Sorbitan Stearate, Stearic Acid, Butylene Glycol, Sorbitan Sesquioleate, Microcrystalline Wax, Betaine, Cyclopentasiloxane, PEG-100 Stearate, Dimethicone, Arginine, Carbomer, Chlorphenesin, Tocopheryl Acetate, Paeonia Suffruticosa Root Extract, Illicium Verum (Anise) Fruit Extract, Nelumbium Speciosum Flower Extract, Citrus Paradisi (Grapefruit) Fruit Extract, Scutellaria Baicalensis Root Extract, Citric Acid, Beta-Glucan, Ethylhexylglycerin, Hydrogenated Lecithin, Portulaca Oleracea Extract, 1,2-Hexanediol, Centella Asiatica Extract, Aloe Barbadensis Leaf Extract, Althaea Rosea Flower Extract, Sodium Hyaluronate, Ceramide NP, Disodium EDTA, Polyquaternium-51, Apium Graveolens (Celery) Extract, Brassica Rapa (Turnip) Leaf Extract, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Extract
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
The formula uses a humectant-plus-occlusive-plus-ceramide approach. This mirrors decades of barrier research identifying the most effective framework for dry and compromised skin. High-concentration Glycerin has extensive published evidence for improving stratum corneum hydration and transepidermal water loss; studies show it performs like expensive humectants at a significantly lower cost. Shea butter contains triterpene esters and tocopherol for occlusive hold and antioxidant support; research on body lotions in dry-skin populations shows consistent softening and hydration benefits from shea-based formulas.
Ceramide NP is one of the skin's native lipids. Topical supplementation has published evidence for improving barrier function in atopic dermatitis and other dry-skin conditions. It works via lipid-matrix reconstruction in the intercellular spaces of the stratum corneum—rebuilding the mortar between the cell-layer bricks. Beta-glucan, derived from oat or yeast, has research on barrier soothing and immunomodulation, with work showing reduced TEWL and improved skin resilience in sensitive-skin populations. Centella asiatica's triterpenoids (asiaticoside, madecassoside) have a robust literature for wound-healing and anti-inflammatory effects. No single active is magical here; the value is the combination—a well-chosen humectant stack, a calibrated occlusive backbone, a lipid-repair active, and soothing support working together.
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists treating dry, sensitive, or mildly eczema-prone skin frequently recommend fragrance-free, ceramide-containing lotions with substantial humectant content—and this formula fits that description. Board-certified dermatologists often emphasize applying moisturizer to damp skin immediately after cleansing or showering to maximize humectant-driven water uptake, a practice this lotion supports well. For patients managing facial sensitivity and dry body skin, one gentle head-to-toe formula simplifies routines and improves compliance. The shea butter content and fatty acid profile typically prompt caution for patients with malassezia folliculitis or active comedonal acne on the face, where a lighter gel moisturizer is usually preferred.
Where it fits in your routine.
Apply to damp skin right after cleansing or showering to maximize humectant uptake. For the face, use one small pump and spread it evenly over the face and neck after serums, then use sunscreen in the morning. For the body, apply two to three pumps to each limb and massage until absorbed, using extra product on elbows, knees, and shins. It works well layered under a thicker occlusive balm on very dry spots in winter.
At $22 for 250ml, the per-milliliter cost is among the best in this quality tier — significantly cheaper per ounce than dedicated facial moisturizers with comparable ceramide content and similar to drugstore body lotions despite offering a more sophisticated formula. Klairs sells this lotion only in the 250ml pump format, so there's no larger value-play to consider. For a twice-daily face-and-arms user, the bottle lasts three to five months, putting the monthly cost around $5-7 — a genuine bargain for a fragrance-free, ceramide-containing, sensitive-skin-friendly lotion.
People with dry, normal, or sensitive skin want one gentle fragrance-free lotion for face and body. It works well for those who dislike using separate products for different areas and want a ceramide-containing formula at a reasonable price.
Oily and acne-prone skin types will find this too thick. Users prone to fungal acne should avoid it because of the shea butter and plant oil content. Strict vegans need alternatives because the ceramide NP sourcing is non-vegan. People in hot climates may prefer a lighter gel moisturizer during summer.
Product details.
Medium-weight white lotion that spreads easily and absorbs without tackiness
Completely fragrance-free with a neutral base note from the plant extracts
Large 250ml pump bottle with a wide base and locking pump head
Spreads smoothly and sinks into the face and arms within a minute. A slight emollient film stays on very dry areas like elbows—intentional and useful in winter. It causes no tingling or stinging. After one week of use, rough texture on body areas softens noticeably.
Apply to face and arms twice daily for 3-5 months, or less if used for full body.
12 months
fall winter
The backstory.
Dear, Klairs launched in 2010 as the sensitive-skin-focused house brand of Korean importer Wishtrend. The Supple Preparation line — toner, facial lotion, and this all-over lotion — became the products that built the brand's international reputation among K-beauty sensitive-skin users on forums like r/AsianBeauty. This all-over variant launched as a response to user requests for a formula rich enough for dry body skin without breaking the brand's face-safe promise.
About Dear, Klairs
Established Brand (5–20 years)Dear, Klairs launched in 2010 as the signature sensitive-skin brand of Wishtrend's parent company. Its Supple Preparation line has become a staple in K-beauty recommendation lists for reactive and compromised skin, and the brand has built a reliable track record over more than a decade.
Common myths.
Face lotions and body lotions must be separate products.
This myth stems from decades of marketing segmentation. Skin is skin. A well-formulated face lotion works on the body. Success depends on the occlusive load, the irritant profile, and if the formula is thick enough for the driest spots.
Ceramides in a body lotion are just for marketing.
Ceramide NP at a meaningful concentration repairs barrier lipids on the face or body. This same mechanism makes CeraVe ceramide body lotions useful for eczema-prone limbs, and it works here too.
FAQ.
Is this good for eczema or extremely dry skin?
The ceramide NP, glycerin, and shea butter make this a reasonable choice for mild eczema or very dry winter skin. For severe eczema flares, thicker clinical options like Eucerin Eczema Relief or CeraVe Healing Ointment work better.
Does it leave a white cast on darker skin tones?
No — the jojoba oil and dimethicone help the lotion absorb evenly without a visible film. You may see a brief dewy finish for a minute before it settles completely.
Is it safe during pregnancy?
Yes — the formula lacks retinoids, salicylic acid, or other ingredients cautioned during pregnancy. Its gentle profile works for pregnancy-related dryness.
Why isn't this product vegan?
The ceramide NP in this formula usually comes from non-vegan sources. Klairs offers other fully vegan moisturizers if you prefer them; this ingredient choice prioritizes sensitive-skin performance over vegan certification.
Is this fungal-acne safe?
No. The shea butter and fatty acid content makes this unsuitable for malassezia folliculitis. For fungal-acne-safe routines, use Klairs' Midnight Blue Calming Cream or other oil-free options.
How long does the 250ml pump last?
Apply to face and arms twice daily for 3-5 months of use. Full body application lasts 6-8 weeks.
Community
What the community says.
"Works for face and body"
"Not greasy"
"Good for sensitive skin"
"Fragrance-free"
"Big 250ml pump lasts months"
"Too rich for oily faces"
"Shea butter can clog pores for some"
"Pump can clog near end"