Alicia Keys built a whole brand around “inner light” — so I needed to know if Keys Soulcare‘s Overnight Mask actually delivers, or just looks good on a marble counter.
Spoiler: It smells like honey and a really expensive spa. But the real test? Waking up without that 2 PM oil slick.
$28 for 2.5 oz. The claim: “transform skin overnight” — which is ambitious, but I’m a sucker for a pretty jar.
Jelly-to-Oil Magic
Goes on like a gel, melts into an oil as you rub it in. Weirdly satisfying.
No Rinse
Slather it on, go to bed, wake up. Lazy girl’s dream.
Glass Jar
Heavy. Looks expensive. Also breakable if you drop it in the bathroom.
They lean hard on the “clean” pitch — and the ingredients list is short enough to read without a magnifying glass. Hero players: bakuchiol (retinol’s gentle cousin) and a probiotic ferment that sounds like kombucha for your face.
- Bakuchiol: Smooths without peeling your skin off
- Squalane: Locks in moisture without feeling greasy
- Probiotic Ferment: Calms redness and supports skin barrier
- Vitamin E: Basic antioxidant — nice, not groundbreaking
It feels like cold honey out of the jar — thick but not sticky. Absorbs in about 60 seconds, then leaves a faint slick. Not greasy, but you’ll feel it on your pillowcase.
Week 2: My skin looked… calmer. Less red around my nose. But that “transformative glow” I was promised? More of a subtle sheen. Not mad, but not screaming from rooftops.
Fine lines looked softer in the morning — temporarily. Breakouts? No change. It’s a hydration mask, not a miracle worker. My skin felt plumper, but “transformation” is a stretch.
It’s a solid night cream with a celebrity price tag — not a skin revolution. You’ll wake up softer, not reborn.