One sells every second. That’s a lot of pink bottles floating around bathroom counters. But here’s the thing — it’s basically fancy mineral oil with a few drops of vitamins thrown in.
The real question isn’t if it works on scars. It’s whether $20 of petrolatum-derivative can actually do anything a $5 tub of Aquaphor can’t. Spoiler: the answer is complicated.
It’s an oil-in-water emulsion that costs $20 for 60ml. Bio-Oil claims to improve the appearance of scars and stretch marks in 8 weeks. That’s a bold timeline for a non-prescription oil.
The Texture
Feels like a lightweight baby oil — absorbs in about 45 seconds, not 10.
The Scent
Faint floral that disappears fast. Thank god.
Photo: deanna alys / Unsplash
The hero is PurCellin Oil — which sounds fancy but is just a synthetic duck feather wax that helps the other ingredients absorb. The rest is a mix of vitamins A, E, chamomile, and lavender oil. None of these are proven to remodel scar tissue on their own.
- PurCellin Oil (derivative): Helps the oil feel less greasy on skin
- Vitamin A (retinyl palmitate): Mild cell turnover support — but unstable in light
- Vitamin E: Antioxidant, not a scar eraser
- Chamomile & Lavender: Anti-inflammatory, smell nice
Photo: Valeriia Miller / Unsplash
It’s slippery but not sticky. I massaged it into an old surgery scar on my knee twice a day. First week — nothing. Just a shiny knee. Second week — the scar looked slightly less red, but honestly that could be the constant massage increasing blood flow, not the oil.
What surprised me: it did soften the scar texture. That part isn’t a lie. But new stretch marks? Didn’t touch them. At all.
Photo: Ramez E. Nassif / Unsplash
After 3 weeks: scar color faded maybe 15%. Texture softened about 20%. Stretch marks — zero change. New red marks from pimples? Those did lighten faster than usual.
Photo: Ira Kuziv / Unsplash
Bio-Oil is a decent moisturizer with a cult following, not a scar eraser. If you buy it, manage expectations — it’s a $20 oil, not laser therapy.