Freshly Juiced Vitamin C Drop
Sensitive Skin's First Vitamin C
Pros & cons.
- +5% ascorbic acid concentration is genuinely comfortable for sensitive and vitamin-C-naive skin
- +Dual vitamin C system — pure ascorbic acid plus stabilized sodium ascorbyl phosphate
- +Extensive botanical antioxidant complex with centella, green tea, and traditional herbal extracts
- +Growth-factor-like peptides add anti-aging benefits unusual for this product category
- +Watery, non-sticky texture absorbs instantly and layers perfectly under other products
- +Over 4 million units sold with consistently high reviews across global retailers
- +Vegan and KARA cruelty-free certified
- −5% ascorbic acid is too low for users seeking aggressive brightening or correction
- −Contains orange and lavender essential oils despite sensitive-skin positioning
- −Small 35ml bottle lasts only 5-6 weeks with daily use
- −Pure ascorbic acid formula oxidizes quickly — requires refrigeration for best results
- −Gradual results may frustrate users expecting fast visible changes
The full review.
Four million bottles. That’s the kind of number that demands explanation — especially for a vitamin C serum that, on paper, seems almost timid. In a category where brands compete on concentration like it’s a potency arms race, Klairs walked into the room with 5% ascorbic acid, a gentle smile, and a quiet confidence that resonated with millions of sensitive-skin owners who’d been watching the vitamin C revolution from the sidelines.
The Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop was born from a specific insight: the people who most need vitamin C’s brightening and protective benefits — those with sensitive, reactive, or easily irritated skin — are precisely the people most likely to be burned by conventional 15-20% ascorbic acid serums. Klairs’ solution was elegantly simple: lower the concentration until it stops hurting, then build a supporting formula that maximizes what that modest percentage can achieve.
Five percent L-ascorbic acid is the core of this formula, and it’s important to understand what that concentration actually does. Research confirms that ascorbic acid at this level provides genuine antioxidant protection against UV-induced free radical damage, supports collagen synthesis, and inhibits melanin production. It won’t deliver the dramatic brightening of a 20% serum in two weeks, but it will deliver steady, cumulative improvement over months — without the redness, peeling, and sensitivity that send many first-time vitamin C users running back to their simple moisturizers.
Klairs sweetened the deal by including sodium ascorbyl phosphate further down the ingredient list — a stabilized vitamin C derivative that continues working even as the pure ascorbic acid begins its inevitable oxidation journey. It’s a smart backup plan that extends the functional life of each drop you apply.
The botanical extract complex is extensive, drawing from traditional East Asian herbal medicine. Centella asiatica extract sits high in the formula as the primary calming agent, while scutellaria baicalensis (Chinese skullcap), coptis chinensis, and magnolia bark contribute anti-inflammatory and antioxidant support. Green tea callus culture extract adds another layer of free radical protection. The breadth of botanical extracts is genuinely impressive — this is a formula that takes its antioxidant mission seriously from multiple angles.
A suite of growth-factor-like peptides — SH-Oligopeptide-1 and -2, SH-Polypeptide-1, -9, and -11 — elevates this serum beyond simple vitamin C delivery. These peptides support cellular renewal and collagen synthesis, adding an anti-aging dimension that most vitamin C serums at any price point don’t attempt. At the concentrations present here, they’re supplementary rather than starring, but their inclusion shows formulation ambition.
The texture is exactly what you want from a vitamin C serum: a thin, nearly water-like liquid that drops from the glass pipette, spreads easily across the face, and absorbs in seconds. There’s no stickiness, no film, no pilling when you layer moisturizer on top. The subtle citrus-herbal scent from the orange and lavender essential oils is pleasant for most users, though this is where the formula’s sensitive-skin claim develops a small asterisk.
Let’s address the essential oils directly. Orange oil and lavender oil are potential sensitizers. For a brand that built its identity on sensitive skin compatibility, including essential oils is a notable choice. The concentrations are low enough that the vast majority of sensitive skin types won’t react, but for the small percentage of users with documented essential oil allergies, this creates an unnecessary exclusion. It’s the one formulation decision that doesn’t fully align with the product’s positioning.
The dark amber glass bottle is more than aesthetic — it’s functional protection against the light-induced oxidation that rapidly degrades ascorbic acid. The 35ml size, which feels small for the price, is actually a practical decision: pure ascorbic acid in an aqueous formula has a limited shelf life once opened, and a smaller bottle encourages use before significant degradation occurs. Think of it like the name suggests — freshly juiced — and use it while it’s fresh.
Performance unfolds gradually. The immediate post-application glow is real — a subtle luminosity that makes skin look more awake and even-toned within minutes. Cumulative brightening of dark spots and overall tone improvement requires consistent daily use over 8-12 weeks. If you’re accustomed to high-concentration vitamin C serums, this will feel slow. If you’re using vitamin C for the first time, the progression from subtle glow to genuine brightening feels rewarding.
Storage matters more than usual with this product. Refrigeration extends potency significantly. At room temperature, especially in warm climates, the serum can begin turning yellow within a month — a sign of oxidation that reduces efficacy. This isn’t a Klairs-specific issue; it’s inherent to all pure ascorbic acid formulas, though the low concentration does offer slightly more stability than higher-percentage products.
At twenty-three dollars for thirty-five milliliters, the value calculation depends on your expectations. As an entry-level vitamin C that introduces sensitive skin to ascorbic acid without drama, it’s fairly priced. As a vitamin C treatment for experienced users who need maximum potency, the price-per-percentage-point is less competitive. The true value lies in what it prevents — the wasted money on high-concentration serums that sit unused because they’re too harsh to apply consistently.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Water, Propylene Glycol, Ascorbic Acid, Hydroxyethylcellulose, Centella Asiatica Extract, Citrus Junos Fruit Extract, Illicium Verum (Anise) Fruit Extract, Citrus Paradisi (Grapefruit) Fruit Extract, Nelumbium Speciosum Flower Extract, Paeonia Suffruticosa Root Extract, Scutellaria Baicalensis Root Extract, Polysorbate 60, Brassica Oleracea Italica (Broccoli) Extract, Chaenomeles Sinensis Fruit Extract, Citrus Aurantium Dulcis (Orange) Oil, Sodium Acrylate/Sodium Acryloyldimethyl Taurate Copolymer, Disodium EDTA, Lavandula Angustifolia (Lavender) Oil, Camellia Sinensis Callus Culture Extract, Larix Europaea Wood Extract, Chrysanthellum Indicum Extract, Rheum Palmatum Root Extract, Asarum Sieboldi Root Extract, Quercus Mongolia Leaf Extract, Persicaria Hydropiper Extract, Corydalis Turtschaninovii Root Extract, Coptis Chinensis Root Extract, Magnolia Obovata Bark Extract, Lysine HCl, Proline, Sodium Ascorbyl Phosphate, Acetyl Methionine, Theanine, Lecithin, Acetyl Glutamine, SH-Oligopeptide-1, SH-Oligopeptide-2, SH-Polypeptide-1, SH-Polypeptide-9, SH-Polypeptide-11, Bacillus/Soybean/Folic Acid Ferment Extract, Sodium Hyaluronate, Caprylyl Glycol, Butylene Glycol, 1,2-Hexanediol
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
5% L-ascorbic acid sits in an interesting spot in the evidence base. A foundational study by Pinnell et al. in Dermatologic Surgery (2001) shows ascorbic acid provides photoprotection at 10-20% concentrations, with tissue saturation at 20%. However, later research confirms antioxidant activity and collagen-stimulating effects at lower concentrations too. A 2017 review in the Journal of Clinical and Aesthetic Dermatology notes that low-concentration vitamin C formulations provide meaningful antioxidant defense and gradual brightening with much better tolerance.
The addition of sodium ascorbyl phosphate adds a complementary mechanism. Unlike pure ascorbic acid, SAP is stable at neutral pH and converts to active ascorbic acid via phosphatase enzymes upon skin contact. A study in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science (2005) shows SAP's efficacy in reducing acne lesions and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation at 5% concentration, meaning it provides targeted benefits beyond general antioxidant protection.
The peptide complex — specifically SH-Polypeptide-1 (EGF-like) and SH-Oligopeptide-1 — targets epidermal growth factor receptors involved in cell proliferation and wound healing. While this formula uses supplementary concentrations, combining peptide-driven cellular renewal with vitamin C's collagen-stimulating and melanin-inhibiting properties creates a multi-pathway approach to skin rejuvenation that addresses photoaging prevention and existing damage repair.
Centella asiatica's triterpene compounds work with ascorbic acid to provide anti-inflammatory protection through NF-kB pathway modulation. This buffers the mild irritation potential of the acid while adding independent wound-healing and barrier-supportive benefits.
References
- Topical L-Ascorbic Acid: Percutaneous Absorption Studies — Dermatologic Surgery (2001)
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists often recommend the Klairs Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop as a first vitamin C serum for patients with reactive or rosacea-prone skin who failed higher-concentration products. Board-certified dermatologists note that while 5% is below the optimal concentration range in clinical literature, the tolerability advantage is clinically meaningful — a product patients actually use consistently outperforms a more potent product that sits on the shelf due to irritation. Dermatologists also like the dual vitamin C approach but typically caution patients about the essential oils, recommending a patch test for those with known fragrance sensitivities.
Where it fits in your routine.
Apply 3-4 drops to clean, dry skin every morning after cleansing and toning. Spread the liquid evenly over your face and neck, but avoid the eye area. Wait 1-2 minutes for absorption before you apply moisturizer and sunscreen. You must use sunscreen — vitamin C improves UV protection but does not replace it. Store the product in the refrigerator to keep it potent. Use within 2-3 months of opening.
At $23 for 35ml, this serum has a moderate price in the K-beauty vitamin C category. The small size accounts for pure ascorbic acid's short shelf life — you pay for a quantity you can use before oxidation reduces potency. The value is highest for sensitive-skin users who usually spend more on high-concentration serums they cannot tolerate. Klairs is an established K-beauty brand with fifteen years in the market and recognized cruelty-free and vegan certifications, which justifies the price.
Sensitive skin types starting vitamin C without risking irritation. People who find higher-concentration vitamin C serums too harsh. Skincare minimalists wanting a gentle, effective brightening step that keeps routines simple.
Experienced vitamin C users seeking aggressive brightening or significant pigmentation correction will find the 5% concentration underwhelming. People with confirmed allergies to lavender or citrus essential oils should avoid this gentle formulation.
Product details.
All Year Certifications Vegan certifiedKARA cruelty-free certified
The backstory.
The Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop was designed to solve a problem Klairs saw across their sensitive-skin customer base: people who wanted vitamin C benefits but couldn't tolerate the tingling, redness, and instability of conventional 15-20% ascorbic acid serums. Over 4 million bottles sold since its 2016 launch suggest they correctly identified an underserved market. The name itself — 'freshly juiced' — is a nod to pure ascorbic acid's notoriously short shelf life, encouraging users to think of it like fresh orange juice: use it while it's fresh.
About Klairs
Established Brand (5–20 years)Klairs launched in 2010 in South Korea, focusing on sensitive-skin-friendly formulations. Klairs became Korea's first KARA-certified cruelty-free cosmetics line and later earned vegan certification. The Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop has sold more than 4 million units globally and won the 2023 Reviewty Award for No.1 Brightening Product.
Common myths.
5% vitamin C lacks efficacy; use at least 10-15% for results.
Research shows ascorbic acid at 5% concentrations provides antioxidant protection and stimulates collagen synthesis. Higher concentrations increase efficacy but also increase irritation risk without proportional benefit gains above 20%. For daily preventive use, 5% offers a favorable efficacy-to-tolerance ratio.
Vitamin C serums shouldn't be used with niacinamide.
A 1960s study created this concern using extreme conditions not found on skin. In practice, vitamin C and niacinamide layer safely—though waiting a few minutes between applications optimizes absorption for both. This serum's low 5% concentration makes the interaction less of a concern.
FAQ.
How do I know if my Klairs Vitamin C has gone bad?
Fresh, the serum is clear to very pale yellow. If it turns a deep yellow, orange, or brown, the ascorbic acid has oxidized and lost significant potency. Store in a cool, dark place (refrigerator is ideal) and aim to use within 2-3 months of opening. The dark amber bottle helps, but ascorbic acid at any concentration is inherently unstable.
Can I use Klairs Freshly Juiced Vitamin C with retinol?
Yes, but use them at different times. Apply this vitamin C serum in the morning for antioxidant protection, and use retinol in the evening. The low 5% concentration reduces irritation risk when used with retinol, but spacing them apart is still best practice.
Is Klairs Freshly Juiced Vitamin C truly fragrance-free?
Not entirely. The formula contains no synthetic fragrance, but it includes orange oil and lavender oil. These natural essential oils add a subtle scent and can irritate sensitive or allergy-prone skin. This matters despite Klairs' reputation for sensitive-skin-friendly formulations.
Why is the bottle so small for the price?
The 35ml size is intentional. Pure ascorbic acid oxidizes fast when exposed to air, so a smaller bottle ensures you finish the product before it degrades. Daily use lasts 5-6 weeks — the window of optimal potency. A larger bottle oxidizes before you use it all.
Community
What the community says.
"Gentle enough for sensitive skin — no stinging or irritation"
"Lightweight, non-greasy texture absorbs quickly"
"Visible brightening after consistent use"
"Pleasant subtle citrus scent"
"Excellent entry-level vitamin C for beginners"
"5% concentration too low for experienced vitamin C users"
"Contains essential oils despite sensitive-skin positioning"
"Oxidizes quickly if not stored properly — turns yellow/brown"
"Small 35ml bottle runs out fast with daily use"
"Results are gradual and subtle compared to higher-concentration serums"
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