I saw a makeup artist use Aquaphor on a model’s eyelids. Not as a balm — as a highlighter.
The real reason it works? That signature glossy finish lasts for hours without creasing. It’s a $5 glass skin moment.
It’s the Eucerin Aquaphor Healing Ointment. Under $10 for a tub. I bought it for cracked heels, but the cult beauty hype made me experiment.
Cuticle Savior
Massage a tiny dab in — hangovers vanish overnight.
Brow Gel
Tames strays into a laminated look that doesn’t flake.
High-Shine Lip Mask
Way thicker than a gloss — protects against winter wind.
Makeup Eraser
Wipes off stubborn mascara smudges without rubbing your skin raw.
It’s 41% petrolatum. That’s the occlusive barrier. But the magic is in the “healing” part — the humectants that pull water into the skin.
Without them, you’re just sealing in dryness.
- Petrolatum: Locks in moisture with a protective seal
- Glycerin: Humectant that hydrates skin
- Panthenol (Pro-Vitamin B5): Soothes and repairs skin
- Bisabolol: Anti-irritant from chamomile
It’s a translucent jelly — slick, not greasy. Spreads like warm butter and sets to a soft, tacky finish. Not for people who hate any sensation on their skin.
Week 2 update: I used it on a fresh paper cut. Healed in half the time. The tube now lives in my bag, not my medicine cabinet.
My cuticles are genuinely reformed. As a highlighter? Stunning. As an all-over face moisturizer? Too much for me — woke up with a tiny whitehead.
It’s a brilliant, boring product that out-performs a dozen niche buys. Not sexy, just smart.