I put Nivea on my left leg and a $65 French cream on my right. Three hours later, I couldn’t tell which was which.
The cheap one won on texture. That’s not supposed to happen.
Nivea Essentially Enriched Body Lotion. $6.99 at Target. The label says “48h moisture for very dry skin” — I rolled my eyes, but the pump bottle doesn’t lie.
Instant Absorption
Sinks in under 20 seconds. No greasy palm-prints on your phone for an hour.
Weirdly Non-Sticky
Most heavy lotions feel like glue. This one dries down to nothing — almost like you didn’t put anything on.
The Smell Factor
It smells like a grandma’s purse. Not fancy. But it fades fast, so I forgive it.
Photo: Ben Robbins / Unsplash
No retinol or peptides here — it’s a drugstore formula with old-school heavy lifters. The magic is in the ratios, not the hype.
- Glycerin: sucks moisture from the air into your skin — works better than most oils
- Shea Butter: actual emollient that softens, not just sits on top
- Mineral Oil: unfancy but seals everything in without breaking you out
- Dimethicone: gives that silky finish luxury creams charge $40 for
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
First pump — thick, almost like cold yogurt. Rubs in white for a second, then vanishes. My skin felt… plump. Not oily. Not tight. Just normal.
Week two: my elbows stopped flaking. That never happens with fancy creams. One weird thing — it pills if you layer it over a silicone-based sunscreen. So don’t.
Photo: Antonio Araujo / Unsplash
After two weeks, my skin stayed soft through a full workday. Didn’t fix my cracked heels — that needs urea. But everything else? Smooth.
Photo: Hemptouch CBD / Unsplash
This lotion has no business being this good for this cheap. I’m annoyed I spent years on overpriced jars.