I caught you. You’re spraying your face with toner and slapping on hyaluronic acid like it’s a moisturizer. Stop. That “plump” you think you’re feeling? It’s probably tackiness, not hydration.
The whole point of Niod Multi-Molecular HA is that it uses different weight molecules to sink into multiple depths of your skin. But if your pH is off or your skin isn’t properly *damp* (not wet), the heavy molecules just sit on top and suck water from the air — which means they’re pulling from *your* barrier, not the environment. You’re essentially paying for a drying agent.
It’s $30 for 30ml. The claim: a “cascade” of hydration using 15 different molecular weights of HA. That sounded like marketing fluff until I realized they actually engineered the ratios so the smallest molecules hit the dermis while the biggest ones film the surface.
15 Molecular Weights
Not a gimmick — the tiny ones actually penetrate, the big ones stay put.
pH-Optimized Formula
Sits around 5.5-6.0, which means it plays nice with your acid mantle (unlike most HA serums that are too acidic).
Triple Delivery System
Combines liposomal, enzymatic, and time-release tech so you don’t get that midday dehydration crunch.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
The hero here is the blend — not one ingredient but a stack. They use low-molecular-weight HA (500 Da) for deep penetration and high-molecular-weight HA (up to 1.5 MDa) for surface film. The middle weights bridge the gap. It’s basically a hydration staircase.
- Sodium Hyaluronate: Smallest molecule — goes deep, no joke
- Hydrolyzed Hyaluronic Acid: Mid-weight — fills the gap layers
- Sodium Acetylated Hyaluronate: Stays on top, prevents TEWL
- Pullulan: Not HA, but helps the whole thing spread without pilling
Photo: Mariia Shalabaieva / Unsplash
First squeeze: it’s a clear, slightly viscous gel — think watery aloe but with a slip. Absorbs in about 12 seconds if you press it in. If you rub, it foams like cheap soap. That’s the pH reacting to friction. Gross.
Week 2: I stopped using it on *just* damp skin and started pressing it into skin that was still slightly *tacky* from my toner. Huge difference. The surface didn’t feel sticky anymore — just dense. Like my skin had been upholstered.
Photo: Evangeline Sarney / Unsplash
Measurably: my fine lines around the mouth looked less like crepe paper after 10 days. The “dehydration shine” (that greasy-but-thirsty look) vanished by week 3. But my T-zone still gets oily — this isn’t a moisturizer, it’s a hydrator. Don’t expect plumping like filler.
Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash
It’s a technical product for people who treat skincare like a chemistry set. If that’s you — buy it. If you want a lazy pump-and-go hydrator, get something simpler.