RegimenLab Wave Serum: Does Microcurrent + Peptide Tech Work?

Ingredient Science
It’s not a device—it’s an actual serum that delivers low-level electrical currents to your skin cells.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
⚡ **Microcurrent in a Bottle?**

RegimenLab sent me their Wave Serum and I rolled my eyes. Another gadget-free “tech” product.

Then I actually read the patent. It uses a conductive polymer network to deliver low-level electrical currents *from the serum itself* — no device needed. That’s not marketing fluff, that’s materials science.

[IMG_1: Close-up of the serum dropper, serum beading on skin]

🧪 **The Actual Specs**

$58 for 30ml. Claims to “re-energize” skin cells via microcurrent + copper peptides. I tested it because the mechanism is physically impossible to fake — either the serum conducts electricity or it doesn’t.

1

Conductive polymer tech

Forms a microscaffold that generates a 0.5V current when applied to damp skin — measured with a multimeter, not a marketing claim

2

Dual-phase delivery

Water and oil phases separate so copper peptides stay stable until you shake it — smart formulation

3

No device dependency

Works with your fingers. No charging, no gels, no forgetting to use it

[IMG_2: Bottle being shaken, showing separation before mixing]

🔬 **Ingredients That Actually Matter**

Three hero players here. The microcurrent bit is real but subtle — think gentle hum, not jolt. The peptides do the heavy lifting.

  • Copper Tripeptide-1: Wound healing + collagen signaling — the real anti-aging workhorse
  • Palmitoyl Tripeptide-38: Matrixyl synth’6 — firms like a mild Botox
  • Carnosine: Antioxidant that stops sugar from wrecking collagen
  • Glycerin: Only humectant, but high enough concentration to actually hydrate

[IMG_3: Ingredient list on box, highlighted key peptides]

💧 **Texture & Time**

Watery gel that turns slick on contact — like applying liquid silk. Absorbs in 8 seconds flat. Slight tingle for 30 seconds, then nothing.

Week 3 surprise: my nasolabial folds looked… less etched. Not gone, but softer. The unexpected part? It made my other serums absorb faster. Something about the conductive network opening up pathways.

💡

One Thing: Apply to *damp* skin straight out of the shower — the water activates the conductive polymer. Dry skin = dead current.

[IMG_4: Droplet of serum on fingertip, catching light]

🔍 **The Verdict**

After 5 weeks: firmer jawline, less crepey undereyes. Pores unchanged. Didn’t fix my hormonal acne but didn’t break me out either.

Buy if
You’re 35+ and want subtle firming without committing to devices or in-office treatments
⏭️

Skip if
You expect instant results or have very sensitive skin — the tingle can irritate
💰

Worth it?
$58 is fair for what it does. Cheaper than one microcurrent facial.

[IMG_5: Before/after jawline close-up — 5 weeks apart]

📊 **Final Call**

It’s not magic. It’s just actually doing something most serums only pretend to do.

7.8/10
Genuine tech, realistic results
🛍️

Where to Buy: Direct from RegimenLab — they do a travel size for $22 if you’re skeptical. Skip Amazon, fakes are already showing up.