You’ve seen it. The shiny little tube that every cool girl on your feed won’t shut up about. I caved.
Hailey Bieber’s Rhode Peptide Lip Treatment is the celebrity beauty equivalent of a white t-shirt — simple, expensive for what it is, and everyone swears it’s different. I needed to know if my $5 drugstore balm was getting embarrassed.
It’s a peptide-packed lip balm that costs $16 and promises to “plump and nourish” without any of that tingly burning. That’s the hook — it’s supposed to look like a gloss but work like a treatment.
Peptide Complex
Hypes collagen support. Realistically, it just makes lips look less flat.
Shea Butter + Cupuaçu
Feels rich without being greasy. Sinks in about 45 seconds.
Avocado Oil
The reason your lips don’t peel after 3 hours of wear. Smart.
Photo: Soheil Kmp / Unsplash
It’s shorter than most serums. No filler nonsense. The hero here is the peptide blend — it’s the same tech they use in face creams, just miniaturized for your mouth. The tripeptide-1 is what actually gives that subtle “I just got a lip flip” look without the needle.
- Tripeptide-1: Mimics collagen signaling for subtle plumpness
- Shea Butter: Locks moisture in without a sticky finish
- Cupuaçu Butter: Thicker than cocoa butter, absorbs faster
- Avocado Oil: Fatty acids that actually soften dry patches
Photo: ajie wp / Unsplash
First dip: it’s thick. Like cold honey. But it melts on contact — no tugging, no white line. The unsung weirdness? It tastes faintly like vanilla and sunscreen. Not bad, just… specific.
Week two: I stopped reaching for my Laneige mask at night. That never happens. The surprise? It actually stays on through a coffee run without turning into a sticky mess. One coat at 8am still had shine at lunch.
Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash
My lips didn’t get bigger, but they stopped looking like cracked pavement. The texture shift is real — smoother, less flaky, and the shine is a happy side effect. It’s not magic, it’s just really good formulation.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
Is it better than your drugstore fave? Yes — if your drugstore fave is a basic Chapstick. No — if you’re loyal to Laneige or Aquaphor. But for a celeb brand, this one actually works.