So Avene went and reformulated their cult Cicalfate+ cream. The 2026 version is supposed to be gentler. I rolled my eyes — until I tested it on a compromised barrier.
The old version could sting on raw skin. This one? Silent. No burn. That’s the whole story.
It’s a $28 restorative cream. Claims to repair damaged skin in 48 hours. I called bullshit, but my cheek had other plans.
Sucralfate swap
Replaced the old zinc-copper combo with a patented healing complex — less irritation, same crust-busting power.
Texture upgrade
No more white cast. Blends clear in 5 seconds. Finally.
pH balanced to 5.5
Your acid mantle stops screaming. Tiny change, huge difference.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
They didn’t just add soothing stuff. They removed the triggers. The hero is a postbiotic called Cicaplast-like no, that’s La Roche — this is C-Restore. It rebuilds the lipid barrier without feeding bacteria.
- C-Restore™: Mimics skin’s own repair signals
- Sucralfate: Forms a protective film over wounds
- Avène Thermal Spring Water: Calms inflammation on contact
- Glycerin: Not sticky, just hydrating
Photo: Ali Pazani / Unsplash
Thick but not suffocating. Spreads like a dense balm that melts into a second-skin feel. No greasy residue on my pillowcase.
Week two: I slathered it on a retinol burn. By morning, the redness halved. Unexpected win — it didn’t clog my pores. Even my chin stayed clear.
My barrier went from angry to neutral in 72 hours. No new breakouts. But don’t expect miracles on chronic rosacea — it’s maintenance, not cure.
The reformulation fixed the one thing that made me hesitate before. No sting, real repair. Keep it in your emergency kit.