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Murad Targeted Wrinkle Corrector 0.5 oz white tube with teal Murad branding

Targeted Wrinkle Corrector

Instant Line Smoother

dermatologist developed Fragrance Free Paraben Free Pregnancy Safe Cruelty Free Vegan
67/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
7.1
Value for money
6.9
Suitability breadth
4.9
Irritation risk
Med
$85.00
0.5 oz / 15 mL
4.5
500 customer ratings (Amazon)
Data confidence
Medium confidence
500+ aggregated reviews · INCI confirmed
Made in
United States
Launched
2021
PAO
12 mo.
after opening
Certifications
Leaping Bunny certified cruelty-free
Alex Brufsky
Alex Brufsky Founder & Editor
Analysis by DermFND · Last verified May 2026 · Methodology
Verified reviewer
01 · Quick read

Pros & cons.

What we love
  • +Instant visible smoothing of expression lines within minutes of application
  • +Silky, primer-like texture that sits beautifully under makeup without pilling
  • +Completely fragrance-free — safe for sensitive skin and the delicate eye area
  • +Precision tip allows targeted application exactly where wrinkles form
  • +Plant-derived squalane high in the formula provides effective moisture barrier support
  • +Well-formulated hydrating base with urea, trehalose, and amino acids beyond the peptide
  • +Non-greasy finish that works for all skin types including oily
What to know
  • At $85 for 0.5 oz, the price-per-ounce is steep for the ingredient profile
  • Instant smoothing effect is temporary and fades within 6-10 hours
  • Peptide hero ingredient has limited independent clinical validation at this concentration
  • Small tube size means frequent repurchasing for consistent long-term use
  • Can feel slightly stiff or taut on skin after setting, which some users dislike
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

The marketing comparison writes itself: why endure needles when you can smooth wrinkles with a cream? That is the implicit promise of Murad’s Targeted Wrinkle Corrector, and to their credit, the immediate visual effect is genuinely startling. Apply a small amount to forehead lines or crow’s feet, wait two minutes, and the lines soften as if someone gently retouched your face in real time. The question, as always, is what is actually happening beneath the surface.

The answer is both impressive and a little deflating. The instant smoothing comes primarily from a clever combination of polysilicone-11 — a film-forming silicone that creates a flexible, transparent layer over the skin — and sodium acetylated hyaluronate, a modified form of hyaluronic acid that binds more effectively to the skin surface than standard HA. Together, they physically fill and blur fine lines, much like a high-end primer. It works. It works really well, actually. But it works the way a good primer works, not the way a filler works.

Then there is the headline ingredient: acetyl hexapeptide-8, sometimes marketed under the trade name Argireline. The pitch is that this peptide mimics the mechanism of botulinum toxin by inhibiting neurotransmitter release at the neuromuscular junction, preventing the muscle contractions that create expression lines. In a petri dish, the concept holds up — the peptide does interact with SNARE protein complexes involved in vesicle fusion. In the real world, applied topically through a cream, the evidence becomes considerably thinner. The manufacturer’s own studies show modest improvements, but independent clinical trials with robust methodology are sparse. A 2013 study published in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science found that a 10% concentration of the peptide reduced wrinkle depth by about 30% over 30 days — but that concentration is almost certainly higher than what appears in this formula, where the peptide sits near the bottom of the ingredient list.

What saves this product from being a disappointment is that the supporting cast is genuinely thoughtful. Squalane, positioned second on the INCI list, is an excellent plant-derived emollient that prevents moisture loss without feeling heavy or greasy. Urea — underrated in anti-aging — acts as both a humectant and a gentle keratolytic, softening the surface of expression lines while drawing moisture in. Trehalose provides cellular protection under environmental stress, and a cocktail of yeast amino acids, inositol, taurine, and betaine supports overall skin conditioning. This is not a one-trick formula propped up entirely by marketing. The hydrating architecture is solid.

The texture is where this product truly shines. It has the consistency of a lightweight, almost watery cream that glides on with a silky feel and sets into a barely perceptible film. There is no stickiness, no stiffness, no white cast. It sits beautifully under makeup — in fact, many users have adopted it as a targeted primer for problem areas rather than a standalone treatment. For forehead lines, eleven lines, and crow’s feet, the application is intuitive: a small dab patted gently into each line, allowed to set for a minute, then followed by moisturizer or sunscreen.

The fragrance-free formulation deserves a nod. Murad has kept this clean of unnecessary sensitizers, making it accessible for sensitive skin and safe for the delicate eye area where many wrinkle correctors fear to tread. No essential oils, no drying alcohols, no fragrance compounds. For a targeted treatment that will be applied repeatedly to thin, sensitive skin, this restraint matters.

Now for the honest reckoning with price. At $85 for 0.5 ounces, this sits firmly in the premium tier. The tube is small — comically small if you are expecting to treat your entire face. But targeted application means a little goes further than you might expect; two to three months of twice-daily use on specific wrinkle zones is realistic. Still, the cost per ounce is steep for a formula whose hero ingredient has limited independent validation and whose most impressive effect — the instant smoothing — is fundamentally cosmetic and temporary.

Murad has been in the game since 1989, and Dr. Howard Murad’s credentials as a UCLA-affiliated dermatologist and pharmacist are legitimate. This is not a brand making claims it cannot contextualize. The Targeted Wrinkle Corrector represents their attempt to offer an over-the-counter alternative to injectables, and on the cosmetic front, it succeeds admirably. As an instant confidence boost before a meeting, a date, or a photo — it delivers. As a long-term wrinkle treatment that will structurally change your skin? The evidence does not yet support that promise with the same enthusiasm.

The product occupies an interesting niche: too expensive to use carelessly, too effective at instant smoothing to dismiss, and too reliant on a peptide with emerging evidence to fully endorse as an anti-aging powerhouse. If you go in with eyes open — understanding that you are buying a beautifully formulated instant smoother with a side of peptide potential — it is a satisfying purchase. If you expect it to replace your dermatologist’s Botox appointment, you will be disappointed.

Formula

 ### About Murad

 Murad has been in the game since 1989, and Dr. Howard Murad's credentials as a UCLA-affiliated dermatologist and pharmacist are legitimate.

 ### Reality

 The instant smoothing comes primarily from a clever combination of polysilicone-11 — a film-forming silicone that creates a flexible, transparent layer over the skin — and sodium acetylated hyaluronate, a modified form of hyaluronic acid that binds more effectively to the skin surface than standard HA. Together, they physically fill and blur fine lines, much like a high-end primer. It works. It works really well, actually. But it works the way a good primer works, not the way a filler works.

 ### How to Use

 For forehead lines, eleven lines, and crow's feet, the application is intuitive: a small dab patted gently into each line, allowed to set for a minute, then followed by moisturizer or sunscreen.

 ### Texture

 It has the consistency of a lightweight, almost watery cream that glides on with a silky feel and sets into a barely perceptible film. There is no stickiness, no stiffness, no white cast.

 ### Scent

 The fragrance-free formulation deserves a nod. Murad has kept this clean of unnecessary sensitizers, making it accessible for sensitive skin and safe for the delicate eye area where many wrinkle correctors fear to tread. No essential oils, no drying alcohols, no fragrance compounds.

 ### Packaging

 At $85 for 0.5 ounces, this sits firmly in the premium tier. The tube is small — comically small if you are expecting to treat your entire face. But targeted application means a little goes further than you might expect; two to three months of twice-daily use on specific wrinkle zones is realistic.

 ### PM routine
03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
A neurotransmitter-inhibiting peptide marketed as 'topical Botox' — in this formula it works alongside the hyaluronic acid and squalane to target expression lines by theoretically reducing muscle micro-contractions that deepen wrinkles over time.
Emerging
Caution
An acetylated form of hyaluronic acid with enhanced skin-binding properties compared to standard sodium hyaluronate. In this targeted treatment, it provides the instant plumping effect that visibly fills fine lines on contact, working synergistically with the urea humectant layer beneath.
Well Established
OK
Plant-derived emollient positioned high in this formula's ingredient list, serving as the primary occlusive agent that locks in the hydration delivered by the hyaluronic acid and urea — preventing transepidermal water loss from the treated wrinkle areas.
Well Established
OK
A powerful humectant and gentle keratolytic that draws moisture into the skin while softening the surface texture around wrinkle areas. At lower concentrations like this, it primarily hydrates rather than exfoliates, complementing the HA's plumping action.
Well Established
OK
A natural disaccharide that protects skin proteins from denaturation under environmental stress. In this anti-aging formula, it supports cellular resilience alongside the yeast amino acids and taurine, helping maintain the structural integrity of the skin around expression lines.
Promising
OK
Full INCI list

Water/Aqua/Eau, Polysilicone-11, Squalane, Propanediol, Cetyl Alcohol, Sodium Acrylates Crosspolymer-2, Potassium Cetyl Phosphate, Polyglyceryl-3 Laurate, Urea, Yeast Amino Acids, Trehalose, Inositol, Taurine, Betaine, Laureth-12, Chlorphenesin, Barium Sulfate, Sodium Acetylated Hyaluronate, Sodium Carbonate, Disodium EDTA, Glyceryl Oleate, Ethylhexylglycerin, Acetyl Hexapeptide-8, Potassium Sorbate, Sodium Benzoate, Phenoxyethanol, Tocopherol

Product flags
✓ Fragrance Free ✓ Alcohol Free ✓ Oil Free ✗ Silicone Free ✓ Paraben Free ✓ Sulfate Free ✓ Cruelty Free ✓ Vegan ✗ Fungal Acne Safe
Potential irritants
laureth-12
04 · Compatibility

Skin match.

Pairs well with
retinolvitamin C serumpeptide serumSPF
Skin types
Best for
normaldrycombination
Works for
oilysensitive
Addresses conditions
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

Acetyl Hexapeptide-8 (trade name Argireline) drives this formula's anti-aging claim. This synthetic peptide interferes with SNARE complex assembly, the same protein machinery botulinum toxin targets to stop muscle contraction. Lipotec, the ingredient manufacturer, ran in vitro studies showing Argireline inhibits catecholamine release from chromaffin cells by up to 40%, which suggests a way to reduce muscle-driven wrinkles. A clinical study in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science (Blanes-Mira et al., 2002) found a 10% solution applied twice daily for 30 days reduced wrinkle depth by approximately 30% via silicone replicas. This concentration is much higher than most commercial formulas, including this one, where the peptide sits low on the INCI list.

The sodium acetylated hyaluronate and polysilicone-11 combination drives the immediate visible effects. Acetylated hyaluronic acid binds to skin better than standard sodium hyaluronate; research in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology (Fallacara et al., 2017) shows improved moisture retention and surface smoothing. The polysilicone film-forming agent creates a flexible optical layer that physically blurs fine lines.

The urea, trehalose, betaine, and taurine hydration complex provides humectant and osmoprotective benefits. At low concentrations (under 10%), urea works as a humectant and mild keratolytic, a use documented for decades in the British Journal of Dermatology. Studies show trehalose protects proteins from denaturation under stress, which may prevent collagen degradation.

References

  1. A new lipopeptide that inhibits SNAP-25-Syntaxin interaction: application to anti-wrinkle formulationsInternational Journal of Cosmetic Science (2002)
  2. Hyaluronic Acid in the Third Millennium — Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology (2017)

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists view acetyl hexapeptide-8 as a promising but unproven topical alternative to neurotoxin injections. Board-certified dermatologists note that while the mechanism is scientifically plausible, getting a topical peptide through the stratum corneum at concentrations high enough to inhibit neuromuscular signaling is a major challenge. Most dermatologists recommend this product for cosmetic smoothing rather than long-term anti-aging. The fragrance-free, non-irritating formula works for patients wanting a daily wrinkle smoother without the cost or commitment of injectables. Dermatologists advise using it to complement — not replace — retinoids and sunscreen in an evidence-based anti-aging regimen.

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 Vitamin C serum
03 THIS PRODUCT on wrinkle areas
04 Moisturizer
05 SPF 30+
PM routine
01 Oil cleanser or micellar water
02 Gentle cleanser
03 Retinol treatment
04 THIS PRODUCT on wrinkle areas
05 Night cream
How to use

Cleanse your skin and apply your serum, then squeeze a small amount (about a grain-of-rice size per area) onto your fingertip. Pat — do not rub — into targeted wrinkle zones: forehead lines, crow's feet, smile lines, or glabella (between-the-brow) lines. Wait 1-2 minutes for the product to set before you apply moisturizer and sunscreen. Use morning and evening. This works over most serums and under all moisturizers and SPF products. It also works as a targeted primer under makeup for a smooth, line-free finish.

Value assessment

At $85 for 0.5 oz, the Targeted Wrinkle Corrector costs too much for its ingredient quality. The INCI list is well-formulated but lacks expensive or rare actives; squalane, urea, and hyaluronic acid cost much less. You pay for the elegant delivery system, the precision application format, and Murad's legacy formulation expertise. The small tube lasts 2-3 months with targeted use, lowering the per-application cost. However, consumers seeking long-term anti-aging value get better returns from a proven retinoid or vitamin C serum at the same price point.

Who should buy

Ideal for people in their late 30s to 60s who want to soften expression lines instantly and non-invasively before events, meetings, or daily wear. It works well for those needing a fragrance-free, gentle option that also acts as a targeted primer under makeup.

Who should skip

Skip this if you want long-term structural wrinkle reversal; a retinoid works better for less money. This also lacks value for budget users who can get similar instant smoothing by buying a good hyaluronic acid serum and silicone-based primer separately.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Texture

Lightweight, silky cream with a smooth, primer-like consistency. It glides on easily and sets into a soft, flexible film over targeted areas.

Scent

Unscented — no detectable fragrance.

Packaging

White squeeze tube with a precision tip for targeted application on wrinkle areas. Minimalist Murad branding in signature teal and white.

First use

The first application shows immediate smoothing; fine lines look plumped and softened within minutes. The product sets into a soft film that feels slightly taut but not uncomfortable. It causes no tingling, stinging, or adjustment period. These results are cosmetic and temporary initially; the peptide component provides cumulative benefits over weeks of consistent use.

How long it lasts

2-3 months with twice-daily targeted application to 2-3 facial areas

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

All Year

Finish
satinnon-greasylightweight
Certifications
Leaping Bunny certified cruelty-free
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

Developed by Murad as part of their Resurgence anti-aging line, this product was born from Dr. Howard Murad's philosophy of 'inclusive health' — addressing aging concerns through targeted topical science rather than invasive procedures. It represents Murad's attempt to bridge the gap between injectable fillers and daily skincare, offering a non-invasive alternative for expression line correction.

About Murad

Legacy Brand (20+ years)

Murad was founded in 1989 by Dr. Howard Murad, a board-certified dermatologist and trained pharmacist who served as Associate Clinical Professor of Dermatology at UCLA for nearly 30 years. The brand was acquired by Unilever in 2015 and continues to develop clinical-grade formulations backed by in-house research.

Brand founded: 1989 · Product launched: 2021
09 · Setting the record straight

Common myths.

Myth

Acetyl hexapeptide-8 works topically like Botox.

Reality

Both target muscle-related wrinkles, but acetyl hexapeptide-8 uses a different, weaker mechanism than botulinum toxin. It reduces neurotransmitter release at the skin surface slightly, but independent clinical evidence for significant wrinkle reduction is limited compared to the robust data behind injectable neurotoxins.

Myth

The instant smoothing shows the product fills wrinkles from within.

Reality

The polysilicone film-forming agent and hyaluronic acid create an immediate optical smoothing effect on the skin surface. True structural wrinkle improvement requires weeks of consistent peptide application.

10 · Common questions

FAQ.

Does Murad Targeted Wrinkle Corrector really work like Botox?

Not quite. It contains acetyl hexapeptide-8 to target expression lines like Botox, but topical delivery is less potent than an injectable neurotoxin. The instant smoothing comes from the hyaluronic acid and silicone matrix filling surface wrinkles. Peptide benefits may develop over 4-8 weeks but won't replicate Botox results.

Can I use Murad Targeted Wrinkle Corrector with retinol?

Yes — this product works well with retinol in your routine. Apply your retinol treatment first (usually at night), then layer this wrinkle corrector over targeted expression lines. The squalane and hyaluronic acid in this formula buffer the dryness retinol causes. These ingredients make the products complementary rather than conflicting.

How long do the results of Murad Targeted Wrinkle Corrector last?

The instant smoothing effect lasts 6-10 hours before the polysilicone film breaks down. For sustained improvements, apply twice daily for 4-8 weeks so the peptide and hydrating ingredients deliver cumulative benefits to expression line areas.

Is Murad Targeted Wrinkle Corrector worth the price?

At $85 for 0.5 oz, this is a premium investment. The immediate cosmetic smoothing effect works well but is temporary. It delivers instant line-softening for events or daily wear and uses a fragrance-free, gentle formula. For long-term anti-aging results, a retinoid or vitamin C serum offers better value per dollar.

Can I wear Murad Targeted Wrinkle Corrector under makeup?

This is one of the product's strengths. The silky, primer-like texture creates a smooth, non-greasy base that helps makeup sit better over expression lines. Many users apply it to forehead lines and crow's feet before foundation for a blurred, wrinkle-minimized finish throughout the day.

Community

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"Instant visible smoothing of fine lines"

"Lightweight non-greasy texture"

"Works well under makeup as a primer"

"Noticeable plumping effect on forehead lines"

"Fragrance-free and gentle on sensitive skin"

Common complaints

"Results are temporary and fade within hours"

"Expensive for the small 0.5 oz size"

"Can feel stiff or tight on some skin types"

"Peptide efficacy not strongly supported by independent research"

"Requires consistent long-term use for cumulative benefits"

Notable endorsements
Dr. Daniel Sugai, board-certified dermatologistStyleCaster 'Like Botox in a Bottle' editorial featureRefinery29 feature
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