La Mer Crème de la Mer Reformulation: Is the New Formula Better?

Reformulation Alert
After 60 years, La Mer quietly swapped out a signature ingredient — and loyal fans are divided.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.💧The Miracle Broth Shake-Up

After 60 years, La Mer quietly swapped out lime tea concentrate for a synthetic alternative. Fans are spiraling — and the internet is *loud*.

The old version felt like sinking into a silk duvet. The new one? More like a very expensive cotton sheet — still nice, but you *know* the difference.

2.🧰What’s Actually in the Jar

It costs $205 for 1oz. The claim? “Regenerating moisture” — but really, you’re paying for texture and that cult status.

1

New Miracle Broth™

Fermented kelp base is still there, but the “lime tea extract” is now a lab-made dupe. Smells less herbal, more floral.

2

Lipid-Rich Formula

Shea butter and lanolin alcohol are still doing the heavy lifting. It’s thick — not for the faint of heart.

3

The ‘Soft’ Version

They pushed the Soft Cream as the “upgrade.” It’s not. It’s lighter, but you lose that iconic sink-in feel.

silver spoon and fork on white surface

Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash

3.📌Ingredients That Matter

The hero ingredients are still decent — just less *magical*. The kelp ferment is the real star; the rest is just filler finesse.

  • Seaweed (Fermented): Plumps skin with amino acids — still the backbone
  • Lime Tea Extract (Synthetic): Now a lab copy — no more ‘living’ fermentation
  • Lanolin Alcohol: Locks moisture like a shield — great for dry, not oily
  • Sesame Oil: Soothes redness — but can clog if you’re acne-prone
assorted plastic bottles on brown woven basket

Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash

4.💪Texture & Real Talk

It’s still a balm-like brick that needs warming. First press: greasy. 30 seconds later: absorbed into a velvety film. Weirdly satisfying.

Week 2: My dry patches are quieter, but my T-zone felt a little *too* loved. The old formula didn’t do that. One unexpected thing — it pills under sunscreen now. Never happened before.

💡

One Thing: Warm a pea-size between fingers for 15 seconds — don’t rub. Press into damp skin. Dry application is a waste of $200.
a bottle of mf hair oil on a beige background

Photo: Mockup Free / Unsplash

5.🌏The Real Results

My skin is softer — measurably. Redness is down. But the glow? Less “lit from within,” more “good moisturizer.” Fine lines stayed the same.

Buy if
You’re dry as a desert and want a thick, comforting seal — no fragrance drama
⏭️

Skip if
You have oily skin or hate pilling under makeup — this is a commitment
💰

Worth it?
Only if you loved the *ritual* of the old one. For results alone? Overpriced.
silhouette photography of person

Photo: Greg Rakozy / Unsplash

6.🔍My Final Take

The new formula is fine — but fine for $205 isn’t a flex. If you’re a die-hard fan, you’ll notice. If you’re new, you won’t know what you’re missing.

6.5/10
Good, not legendary anymore
🛍️

Where to Buy: Sephora or the La Mer site — grab the travel size first. Don’t blind-buy the full jar.