Home / Products / moisturizer / SkinCeuticals / Emollience
DERMFND VERIFIED
SkinCeuticals Emollience rich moisturizer bottle on neutral background

Emollience

Derm Office Staple

clinical Fragrance Free Pregnancy Safe Not Cruelty Free
76/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
8.0
Value for money
7.8
Suitability breadth
5.8
Irritation risk
Med
$68.00
2.4 oz / 75 ml
4.5
2,800 customer ratings (Amazon)
Data confidence
High confidence
2,800+ aggregated reviews · INCI confirmed
Made in
United States
Launched
2002
Best season
fall-
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
  • +Gentle fragrance-free formula tolerated by most sensitive skin
  • +Layers cleanly under vitamin C, retinoids, and SPF
  • +Botanical-oil base feels warmer than typical clinical creams
  • +Commonly used post-procedure in dermatology offices
  • +Soothes winter flakiness and tightness quickly
  • +Good for dry skin wanting non-petrolatum richness
  • +Over two decades of consistent real-world track record
What to know
  • Price is high for a relatively simple plant-oil and shea formula
  • Still uses parabens in the preservative system
  • Too rich for oily or acne-prone skin types
  • Macadamia oil and shea butter rank as potentially comedogenic
  • Pump packaging can get sticky around the dispenser
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

Ask a dermatologist’s front-desk staff which SkinCeuticals product moves slowest off the shelf for its price bracket, and they will probably name Emollience — not because it is bad, but because it lives permanently in the shadow of CE Ferulic, Triple Lipid Restore, and whatever new launch is having its moment. But pull the jar off that shelf and you will find a cream that has been steadily doing its job since the early 2000s, one reassuring pump at a time.

This is a rich moisturizer built for dry, reactive, or winter-cranky skin. The structure is interesting when you actually read the list: instead of leaning on petrolatum and heavy silicones the way most clinical brands do, SkinCeuticals built Emollience on a base of shea butter, rose hip seed oil, macadamia oil, and borage seed oil, with algae extract and grape seed extract playing supporting roles. Glycerin sits at number two, so there is a real humectant backbone under all those lipids. The result is a cream that feels warmer and more botanical than something like Cetaphil Rich or La Roche-Posay Cicaplast — more “apothecary” than “pharmacy.”

Texture

The texture is thick but not stiff. It pushes out of the pump as a dense cream that melts into something closer to a cushiony balm once you work it between your fingers. On the skin it absorbs in thirty to forty seconds and leaves a soft velvet finish — the kind of finish where you can still feel the product doing something half an hour later without it actually looking wet or shiny. Skin quite visibly calms down within a few minutes of application, which is what you want from a cream in this category and at this price. Flakiness softens within the first few days; that tight, winter-morning pulling sensation typically stops by the end of week one.

Works for

What Emollience does especially well is behave under other actives. It was designed from day one to be the moisturizer step that follows CE Ferulic or Phloretin CF in a SkinCeuticals routine, and it shows. It does not pill when you layer it over a vitamin C serum that has fully dried. It does not block retinol absorption. It is fragrance-free and free of most common sensitizers, which is why dermatologists frequently hand it to patients post-procedure — microneedling, light chemical peels, or a run of prescription tretinoin that went too hard.

Common Complaints

Where Emollience is less impressive is the value conversation. Sixty-eight dollars for 2.4 ounces of a plant-oil-and-shea-butter cream is a clinical-brand premium, and you are paying for the brand’s reputation and distribution network as much as the formulation itself. There are drugstore moisturizers with ceramides, cholesterol, and fatty acids in biomimetic ratios that will do more structurally for a compromised barrier at a quarter of the price. And within the SkinCeuticals catalog itself, Triple Lipid Restore 2:4:2 is arguably the more advanced barrier-repair formula, if you want to stay inside the brand. Emollience’s pitch is not “most advanced” — it is “most pleasant to live with when your skin is simply dry and you want something reliable and fragrance-free.”

Not ideal for

There are a couple of honest caveats. The preservative system still uses methyl- and propylparaben, which bothers nobody clinically but will irritate shoppers specifically avoiding parabens. The pump packaging looks airless but occasionally gets sticky around the dispenser. And the macadamia oil and shea butter content pushes it firmly into the “not for acne-prone skin” lane, regardless of what the rest of the formula is doing — oily and combination skin should reach for Hydrating B5 Gel or Daily Moisture instead.

About

One note on personality: Emollience is not a cream that tries to wow you. There is no radiance claim, no tingly peptide moment, no fermented this or encapsulated that. It arrives in beige-and-grey packaging, goes on, and makes your skin comfortable for the next eight hours. In a category increasingly addicted to drama, that kind of quiet competence is genuinely refreshing, even if it makes for boring Instagram content.

Who Should Buy

The people who keep reordering this product are not chasing trends. They are dry-skinned humans in cold climates, post-procedure patients following their derm’s instructions, and people who tried fancier moisturizers, found them disappointing or irritating, and eventually came back to the simple botanical cream their aesthetician recommended three years ago. If that sounds like you, Emollience is worth the line item. If you are building an advanced barrier-repair routine from scratch in 2026, you have more formulation-forward options to consider first.

03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
A lightweight natural oil rich in linoleic acid and provitamin A that slots in alongside macadamia and borage oils to rebuild lipid content without the heaviness of traditional mineral-oil-based rich creams.
Promising
OK
Algae Extract FLAGGED
Provides marine-derived humectant sugars and trace minerals that help this cream hold water against the skin, supporting the glycerin-shea-oil base rather than adding any exfoliating or actives load.
Emerging
Caution
Supplies polyphenol antioxidants that complement the tocopherol here, offering a background layer of free-radical defense for dry, stressed skin that is not wearing a dedicated C+E serum underneath.
Promising
OK
The emollient backbone of Emollience — it fills rough, dry texture, cushions the other plant oils, and gives the cream its characteristic soft, velvety finish that reads more like a rich night cream than a lotion.
Well Established
OK
Listed second, it is the primary humectant doing the water-binding work; in a lipid-heavy cream like this it keeps the finish from going flat or greasy by pulling hydration into the upper layers.
Well Established
OK
Full INCI list

Water, Glycerin, Isohexadecane, Squalane, Butylene Glycol, Glyceryl Stearate, Cetyl Alcohol, PEG-100 Stearate, Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea) Butter, Algae Extract, Vitis Vinifera (Grape) Seed Extract, Rosa Moschata (Rose Hip) Seed Oil, Macadamia Ternifolia Seed Oil, Borago Officinalis Seed Oil, Tocopheryl Acetate, Dimethicone, Stearyl Alcohol, Cetearyl Alcohol, Ceteareth-20, Magnesium Aluminum Silicate, Xanthan Gum, Disodium EDTA, Carbomer, Triethanolamine, Phenoxyethanol, Chlorphenesin, Methylparaben, Propylparaben

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
skinceuticals-ce-ferulicskinceuticals-hydrating-b5-gelretinoids
Skin types
Best for
drynormal
Works for
sensitive
Not ideal for
oilycombination
Caution for
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

The formulation logic here is interesting because it sidesteps the dominant clinical-brand pattern of petrolatum-plus-dimethicone occlusion. Instead, Emollience relies on a cocktail of plant oils — rose hip (Rosa moschata) seed oil, macadamia ternifolia seed oil, and borago officinalis seed oil — combined with shea butter and algae extract. Rose hip seed oil has one of the highest linoleic acid contents of common cosmetic oils (roughly 40-50%), and linoleic acid is known to be incorporated into the skin's ceramide matrix, where it supports barrier recovery. Borage seed oil is notable for its gamma-linolenic acid content, which small dermatology trials have associated with improvements in atopic-dermatitis-like dryness when applied topically, though results are variable and much of the supporting research is older. Shea butter contributes oleic and stearic acids plus minor triterpene fractions that have documented emollient and soothing effects in cosmetic testing. Layered on top of glycerin — the second-listed ingredient — the plant lipids essentially trap humectant-drawn water against the skin rather than sealing with an inert hydrocarbon. Grape seed extract and tocopheryl acetate add a modest antioxidant dimension, which is relevant here because SkinCeuticals designed this cream explicitly to sit on top of its C+E+ferulic serums. There are no trial data specific to Emollience as a finished product, so the evidence base is at the ingredient level rather than the formulation level. That is a fair criticism of any plant-oil-heavy cream at this price, but it is also a reasonable starting point for someone whose primary concern is comfort and barrier support rather than an active-driven outcome.

Dermatologist Perspective

Board-certified dermatologists frequently reach for Emollience as the moisturizer they hand patients after in-office procedures — light chemical peels, microneedling, or the initial weeks of prescription tretinoin — precisely because it is fragrance-free, free of common sensitizers, and does not interfere with the actives being used underneath. It is commonly recommended for patients with dry skin who want something richer than a gel or lotion but who react to heavier occlusives like petrolatum. Dermatologists typically note that while it is not a clinically proven barrier-repair cream in the way a ceramide-cholesterol-fatty-acid formulation would be, its real-world tolerability and layering performance make it a practical choice for mature dry skin, post-procedure recovery, and cold-climate winters. Patients with acne-prone, oily, or fungal-acne-susceptible skin are typically redirected to Hydrating B5 Gel or Daily Moisture instead.

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 CE Ferulic
03 SkinCeuticals Emollience This product
04 Mineral SPF
PM routine
01 Cleanser
02 Retinol
03 SkinCeuticals Emollience This product
How to use

Apply a pea-sized amount to slightly damp skin after your serum, morning or evening. In the morning, wait 60 seconds before applying sunscreen. In the evening, apply Emollience over retinol or a chemical exfoliant once they absorb — Emollience does not interfere with overlying actives. For dry or post-procedure skin, apply a second thin layer at night. Do not apply directly to the eye area — SkinCeuticals makes dedicated eye creams for that. Keep the pump clean; wipe sticky residue from the dispenser tip every week.

Value assessment

At $68 for 2.4 ounces, Emollience costs as much as clinical-brand premium products, making the value question valid. The formulation is thoughtful but not groundbreaking; you pay for consistent quality, derm-office distribution, and two decades of reliability instead of a breakthrough on the INCI list. Emollience is objectively more expensive per ounce than drugstore ceramide creams like CeraVe or La Roche-Posay Cicaplast, yet it provides no meaningfully more barrier-repair data. It is less advanced but meaningfully cheaper than Triple Lipid Restore 2:4:2 from the same brand. The right buyer uses SkinCeuticals products like CE Ferulic or Phloretin CF and wants a moisturizer that integrates cleanly with that routine. Other options offer stronger value.

Who should buy

Dry, normal, or mature skin types want a fragrance-free thick cream that layers cleanly under a SkinCeuticals vitamin C serum or a prescription retinoid. It works well under dermatologist guidance post-procedure. If you trust the brand and want a comfortable, dependable moisturizer, choose Emollience.

Who should skip

Oily, combination, and acne-prone skin needs Hydrating B5 Gel or Daily Moisture — the shea butter and macadamia oil base is too thick. Users wanting the most ingredient-forward barrier-repair science get better value from Triple Lipid Restore or a well-built ceramide cream. Paraben-avoiders should also look elsewhere.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Texture

Thick, cushiony cream that melts into a soft emollient slip on contact

Scent

Faintly plant-oil-like but unscented

Packaging

White and grey airless-style pump bottle

First use

Skin feels softer and more cushioned immediately; most users see less flakiness and tightness within the first week. There is no adjustment period — this is a comfort product, not an active.

How long it lasts

3-4 months with nightly face-and-neck application

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

fall winter

Finish
velvetynon-greasy
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

Emollience emerged in the early 2000s as SkinCeuticals built out a moisturizer range to sit beneath its famous CE Ferulic. It was designed specifically to be the rich half of a two-moisturizer system — Hydrating B5 Gel for oily skin, Emollience for dry — and has quietly held that slot in derm offices for over twenty years.

About SkinCeuticals

Legacy Brand (20+ years)

Dr. Sheldon Pinnell's research at Duke University founded SkinCeuticals in 1997. Dermatologists and medical spas use SkinCeuticals widely. Peer-reviewed literature cites its formulations, especially regarding topical antioxidants.

Brand founded: 1997 · Product launched: 2002
09 · Setting the record straight

Common myths.

Myth

SkinCeuticals Emollience is too occlusive for use under a vitamin C serum.

Reality

Layer this over CE Ferulic or Phloretin CF. The brand built this product as the moisturizer step for that routine. The oils do not stop ascorbic acid absorption once the serum dries.

10 · Common questions

FAQ.

Is SkinCeuticals Emollience worth the price?

If you have chronically dry or winter-weather-reactive skin and need a layer under CE Ferulic that does not pill or interfere, use this. For the most advanced barrier-repair science, Triple Lipid Restore 2:4:2 delivers more from the same brand.

Can I use Emollience on oily or combination skin?

This formula is not for you—the shea butter and macadamia oil base feels heavy and can cause breakouts in acne-prone users. SkinCeuticals Hydrating B5 Gel or Daily Moisture is a better match.

Does Emollience contain parabens?

Yes — it still uses methylparaben and propylparaben as preservatives. If you want paraben-free, SkinCeuticals reformulated newer launches, but this legacy cream keeps the original preservative system.

Is Emollience a night cream or can I use it in the morning?

It works for dry skin, but most users find it most comfortable at night under a sleep routine. In the morning, mix it with a drop of serum to thin the texture before SPF.

Is Emollience fragrance-free?

Yes, it has no added fragrance. The rose hip and macadamia provide a subtle plant-oil scent, but it contains no synthetic or allergenic additives.

Can I use Emollience after a procedure like microneedling?

Dermatologists often recommend it post-procedure because it is fragrance-free, lacks acids or retinoids, and provides gentle barrier support. Always follow your provider's specific aftercare instructions.

Community

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"Relieves winter dryness quickly"

"Non-greasy rich finish"

"Layers well under makeup"

"Good for post-procedure skin"

"Fragrance-free"

Common complaints

"Expensive for what it is"

"Pump packaging can clog"

"Too heavy for combination skin"

"Contains parabens"

Notable endorsements
Widely stocked in US dermatology offices and medical spas
Search the catalog
↑↓ navigate · select · Esc close Powered by Pagefind