Home / Products / moisturizer / SkinBetter Science / Hydration Boosting Cream
DERMFND VERIFIED
SkinBetter Science Hydration Boosting Cream 50ml jar

Hydration Boosting Cream

Derm Office Barrier Repair Staple

professional Fragrance Free Paraben Free Pregnancy Safe Not Cruelty Free
84/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
8.8
Value for money
8.6
Suitability breadth
6.6
Irritation risk
Low
$110.00
4.7
1,100 customer ratings (Amazon)
Data confidence
High confidence
1,100+ aggregated reviews · INCI confirmed
Made in
United States
Launched
2018
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
  • +Includes cholesterol alongside ceramides for full lipid barrier repair
  • +Three ceramide subtypes (NP, AP, EOP) cover distinct barrier functions
  • +Fast-absorbing, velvety texture layers cleanly under SPF and makeup
  • +Exceptional tolerability for sensitive and post-procedure skin
  • +Works as a retinoid buffer without compromising efficacy
  • +Dual-molecular-weight HA plus trehalose for layered hydration
  • +Pregnancy-safe with no retinoids or acids
  • +Formulated for clinical use alongside in-office procedures
What to know
  • $110 for 50ml is expensive compared to pharmacy ceramide creams
  • Only available in one size — no larger value option
  • Physician-dispensed only — not available online directly
  • Can feel slightly heavy for oily skin in humid climates
  • No distinguishing ingredient story beyond solid formulation
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

Here’s a distinction most skincare marketing quietly avoids: a healthy skin barrier is not made of ceramides alone. The lipid matrix that holds your stratum corneum together is a specific three-component mixture — ceramides, cholesterol, and free fatty acids — in roughly a 3:1:1 ratio. When the barrier is damaged by retinoids, over-exfoliation, harsh climate, or post-procedure disruption, replacing only the ceramides rebuilds only one-third of the repair puzzle. The cholesterol and fatty acids are just as structurally essential. Which means that when a cream is labeled as a ‘ceramide moisturizer’ but contains no cholesterol, you’re buying something that looks like the answer to compromised barrier issues but delivers only part of the job. SkinBetter Science’s Hydration Boosting Cream doesn’t skip cholesterol. That alone is most of what earns this moisturizer its place in dermatology offices that stock it, because derms know the difference and their patients recovering from procedures or aggressive active routines need the full lipid repair package.

The rest of the formula is thoughtful in the same way. Three ceramide subtypes — NP, AP, and EOP — cover different functional ceramide roles in the barrier lipid matrix. Squalane, a stable saturated form of the lipid your sebum naturally produces, provides the emollient base that gives the cream its velvety slip without the oxidation concerns of unsaturated oils. Two molecular weights of hyaluronic acid — standard sodium hyaluronate for surface hydration and hydrolyzed low-MW HA for slightly deeper penetration — handle the water-binding layer. Trehalose, a disaccharide originally studied in desert plants that can survive near-complete dehydration, stabilizes cellular water and protects membrane proteins during water loss, which matters for stressed skin. Niacinamide, panthenol, allantoin, and bisabolol round out the supporting cast with mild soothing and barrier support. What you end up with is a moisturizer that treats hydration as a three-part problem — lipid replacement, water binding, and cellular water stabilization — rather than a one-dimensional ‘add more humectant’ approach.

Texture

The texture is where this cream earns unqualified praise from almost everyone who tries it. It’s rich on initial contact but breaks down quickly under the fingertips, absorbing within about a minute without leaving residue or a weird film. No stickiness, no pilling under sunscreen or makeup, no stinging on freshly exfoliated or post-procedure skin. It’s the kind of moisturizer that works equally well as a daily base layer under a full actives routine and as a quiet monotherapy for someone whose skin just needs calming. For patients on prescription tretinoin, this is one of the best buffering strategies available — tretinoin first on dry skin, 20 minutes of absorption, then this cream over the top. The ceramide-cholesterol complex supports the barrier that tretinoin is, by design, temporarily destabilizing, which makes the whole retinoid routine more tolerable and more sustainable.

Works for

The things this cream doesn’t try to do are also worth noting. It isn’t an anti-aging cream in the peptide-heavy sense — there are some peptide-adjacent ingredients but no maxed-out matrikine complex. It isn’t a brightening cream. It doesn’t have a dramatic ingredient story or a hero active that you can point to as the ‘thing that makes it work.’ What it is, structurally, is a well-formulated barrier-repair moisturizer that delivers the boring-but-essential lipid and humectant mix your skin actually needs for daily function. That sounds unremarkable until you compare it to the moisturizers most people actually use, which are typically either too heavy (classic cold cream), too light (gel hydrators), too fragranced, or missing one of the lipid components. The SkinBetter cream does the boring thing exceptionally well, which is why dermatologist offices keep stocking it.

Price

Where the price becomes the conversation is the 50ml size. At $110, this is a $2.20/ml moisturizer, which puts it squarely in the upper tier of the professional category. With twice-daily face and neck application, the jar lasts two to three months, putting the monthly cost around $35-50. There’s no larger size available — no 100ml, no 150ml option — which is frustrating for committed long-term users. You can buy a ceramide cream from a pharmacy brand for $20 that will cover the basics, and depending on your skin’s state, that may be completely adequate. The SkinBetter cream earns its premium mainly through formulation precision and the cholesterol inclusion, which is the thing a cheaper cream is likely to skip. Whether that’s worth a 5x price multiplier over CeraVe depends entirely on whether your skin is in a state that rewards the extra sophistication.

Who Should Buy

A genuine recommendation: this is the moisturizer I’d suggest to someone whose barrier has been chronically struggling with a retinoid routine, someone in active recovery from laser or peel procedures, or someone whose sensitive-skin reactivity isn’t responding to simpler drugstore options. It’s also a strong daily choice for patients already committed to a broader SkinBetter regimen under dermatological guidance, where it slots cleanly into both the morning and evening routines. For someone just looking for a daily moisturizer to go on top of a gentle cleanser and sunscreen, there are less expensive options that will serve just as well — save your budget for the steps where formulation density matters more.

Best Season

One specific note on texture and climate: in humid or very warm climates, this cream can feel slightly heavy for oilier skin types, particularly in the morning. If you’re in a dry climate or working through a winter recovery for dehydrated skin, the richness is exactly what you want. If you’re in Miami in July with combination skin, you may prefer a lighter lotion. The formulation is climate-neutral enough to work in most settings, but it’s not a featherweight.

Final Take

Final take: a genuinely well-formulated, quietly excellent daily moisturizer that delivers the full barrier-repair lipid complex most ceramide creams skip. Exceptional tolerability, clean layering, and a formula that rewards users whose skin is under active-ingredient stress. The price is the main consideration, not the formula. If your barrier needs the real thing, this is the real thing. If you don’t need that level of precision, save the money and get something simpler.

03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
Three ceramide subtypes that replenish the specific lipid species found in healthy stratum corneum, restoring the barrier's waterproofing and water-holding capacity. This is the structural foundation of the formula — the ceramides are what let the humectants in the rest of the cream actually hold water in place rather than evaporate off.
Well Established
OK
The essential lipid partner to the ceramides. Healthy skin barrier lipids exist in a specific ratio of ceramides, cholesterol, and fatty acids, and including cholesterol alongside the ceramides is what distinguishes a well-formulated barrier cream from a ceramide-labeled marketing product.
Well Established
OK
A stable saturated derivative of squalene — the lipid your own sebum naturally produces — that integrates smoothly into the skin's lipid layer without oxidation concerns. In this formula it's the emollient that gives the cream its characteristic velvety slip.
Well Established
OK
Two molecular weights of hyaluronic acid operating at different skin depths — the higher-molecular-weight sodium hyaluronate forms a hydrated film on the surface, while the hydrolyzed low-molecular-weight form penetrates slightly deeper for more sustained hydration.
Well Established
OK
A disaccharide originally discovered in desert plants that survive dehydration, trehalose stabilizes cellular water and protects membrane proteins during water loss. Its inclusion here gives the cream a genuine recovery vector for stressed or post-procedure skin beyond simple humectant hydration.
Promising
OK
Full INCI list · pH 5.5

Water, Glycerin, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, Cetearyl Alcohol, Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea) Butter, Dimethicone, Glyceryl Stearate, PEG-100 Stearate, Squalane, Ceramide NP, Ceramide AP, Ceramide EOP, Cholesterol, Phytosphingosine, Sodium Hyaluronate, Hydrolyzed Hyaluronic Acid, Niacinamide, Panthenol, Allantoin, Bisabolol, Tocopherol, Trehalose, Sodium Lactate, Sodium PCA, Behenyl Alcohol, Xanthan Gum, Carbomer, Tromethamine, Phenoxyethanol, Ethylhexylglycerin, Disodium EDTA

Product flags
✓ Fragrance Free ✓ Alcohol Free ✗ Oil Free ✗ Silicone Free ✓ Paraben Free ✓ Sulfate Free ✗ Cruelty Free ✗ Vegan ✗ Fungal Acne Safe
04 · Compatibility

Skin match.

Pairs well with
sunscreenretinoidsantioxidant-serumsbrightening-serums
Skin types
Best for
drynormalcombinationsensitive
Works for
oily
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

Decades of skin barrier research support this moisturizer. Man et al.'s 1993 study in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology shows that applying barrier lipids (ceramides, cholesterol, and fatty acids) in their physiological ratio repairs the barrier faster than any single-lipid application. That 3:1:1 ratio principle guides dermatologic barrier repair formulations today. Ceramides NP, AP, and EOP (the three subtypes in this cream) serve different roles: NP is the most abundant ceramide in healthy skin, AP adds to the long-chain ceramide pool, and EOP (omega-hydroxy ceramide) forms the lipid lamellae that waterproof the stratum corneum. Including cholesterol alongside the ceramides distinguishes this formulation; skin cells synthesize cholesterol to produce natural barrier lipids, making its role in the lipid matrix non-negotiable. Trehalose, the disaccharide in the humectant layer, works uniquely. A 2008 paper in Chemical Research in Toxicology (Jain and Roy) reviewed how it stabilizes proteins during dehydration stress, a property found in desert plants and used in pharmaceutical lyophilization. Topically, trehalose helps cells retain water under osmotic stress, which aids skin recovering from barrier disruption. The dual-molecular-weight hyaluronic acid approach—combining standard sodium hyaluronate with hydrolyzed low-MW HA—provides surface hydration and deeper penetration, a method validated in multiple humectant delivery studies. This cream is clinically useful because it replicates the healthy skin barrier's lipid and humectant profile in a well-tolerated vehicle.

References

  1. Optimization of physiological lipid mixtures for barrier repairJournal of Investigative Dermatology (1996)

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists recommend barrier-repair moisturizers containing a full ceramide-cholesterol-fatty acid complex for patients recovering from in-office procedures, those on aggressive retinoid regimens, and patients with chronic sensitivity, eczema, or rosacea. Board-certified dermatologists note that over-the-counter ceramide creams often lack cholesterol, which is why physicians prefer options like this one for clinical barrier-repair applications. This cream often buffers tretinoin prescriptions to improve tolerability and compliance. Dermatologists also emphasize that barrier repair is foundational; no brightening, anti-aging, or acne routine works on a compromised barrier. This makes choosing the right moisturizer more important than choosing the right serums.

Guidance

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 Antioxidant serum
03 THIS CREAM
04 SPF 50
PM routine
01 Cleanser
02 Retinoid
03 THIS CREAM
How to use

Apply a moderate amount (about a pea-to-dime size) to clean skin after serums, morning and evening. Smooth it across your face and neck. In the morning, follow with broad-spectrum SPF. If using with tretinoin or another prescription retinoid, apply the retinoid first on dry skin, wait 20 minutes for absorption, then apply this cream over the top. This buffering approach improves retinoid tolerability without reducing efficacy. Use this within 48 hours of most in-office procedures once your dermatologist clears active skincare reintroduction.

Value assessment

At $110 for 50ml, the Hydration Boosting Cream costs more than most professional daily moisturizers. Using it on the face and neck twice daily lasts two to three months, making the monthly cost $35-50. No larger size exists, so loyal users must repurchase every 2-3 months at full price. It costs much more than $15-20 pharmacy ceramide creams; the premium comes from formulation precision, specifically the cholesterol inclusion. The value makes sense for patients using the SkinBetter ecosystem under dermatological guidance. For those wanting a daily moisturizer for a simple routine, a cheaper ceramide cream works for most users.

Who should buy

Patients with barriers struggling from retinoid routines, post-procedure recovery, chronic sensitivity, or environmental stress. It works well for those on a dermatologist-guided SkinBetter regimen. It also suits pregnancy, when retinoid routines pause and the barrier needs extra support.

Who should skip

This works for tight budgets, people whose skin likes simple pharmacy ceramide creams, and those with oily skin in humid climates who prefer lighter gel moisturizers.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Texture

Rich but fast-absorbing cream with a velvety finish

Scent

None detectable

Packaging

Opaque airless pump jar

First use

The first application feels thick but absorbs within a minute, leaving skin soft and supple without residue. It has no tingling, stickiness, or film. It works for anyone with a barrier struggling from actives, winter weather, or post-procedure recovery.

How long it lasts

2-3 months with twice-daily face and neck use

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

All Year

Finish
satinfast-absorbingnon-greasylightweight
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

Launched in 2018 as SkinBetter Science's daily moisturizer offering, the Hydration Boosting Cream was positioned to complement the brand's actives-heavy serum lineup. Dermatology practices wanted a moisturizer they could pair with prescription retinoids and in-office procedures without the ingredient compromises of drugstore ceramide creams. This formula was designed to fit that clinical use case.

About SkinBetter Science

Emerging Brand (2–5 years)

SkinBetter Science launched in 2016. Licensed dermatologist and medical aesthetic practices dispense the brand. L'Oréal acquired SkinBetter Science in 2024. An in-house scientific team develops the formulations; this moisturizer is the foundational hydrator in the brand's daily lineup.

Brand founded: 2016 · Product launched: 2018
09 · Setting the record straight

Common myths.

Myth

You need a separate night cream and day cream.

Reality

A well-formulated moisturizer with a good barrier-repair profile works morning and evening. You only need a different night cream if you want heavier occlusion or more actives at night, which most users do not require.

Myth

Ceramide creams all work the same.

Reality

A ceramide cream differs significantly from a ceramide-plus-cholesterol cream. Cholesterol makes up one-third of the healthy skin lipid barrier; creams without it provide only one part of the repair puzzle.

10 · Common questions

FAQ.

Is this heavy enough for very dry winter skin?

Most users will find this sufficient, but very dry skin or extreme winter climates may need a thicker occlusive at night. The ceramide-cholesterol base handles most barrier work; an overnight facial oil or petrolatum layer handles extreme cases.

Can I use this with tretinoin?

Yes — this works well for this purpose. Apply tretinoin to dry skin at night, wait 20 minutes, then apply this cream over the top to buffer the retinoid and reduce dryness. The ceramide-cholesterol complex supports the barrier that tretinoin disrupts.

Is it safe post-procedure?

Yes — it is gentle enough for use within 48 hours of most in-office procedures once your dermatologist clears it. The formula has no fragrance, no acids, and no retinoids.

Can oily skin use this?

Yes, but you may prefer a lighter lotion. The cream absorbs fast and is non-greasy, though it is thicker than a pure gel moisturizer. Use it sparingly for combination or oily skin in humid climates.

Is this pregnancy-safe?

Yes. The formula has no retinoids, salicylic acid, or hydroquinone. All ingredients are pregnancy-compatible.

Does it come in a larger size?

No — only the 50ml jar is available. Using it twice daily on the face and neck lasts about two to three months.

Community

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"exceptionally comforting on compromised skin"

"layers perfectly under SPF and makeup"

"genuinely hydrating without greasiness"

"works post-procedure without stinging"

Common complaints

"expensive for a moisturizer"

"only 50ml size available"

"no larger value size"

"physician-dispensed only"

Notable endorsements
Dermatologist offices nationwide
Search the catalog
↑↓ navigate · select · Esc close Powered by Pagefind