Dieux Delivré Eye Cream: Is It Really Clean?

Greenwashing Check
This ‘clean’ eye cream went viral for its airless pump—but a closer look at the preservative system reveals a hidden synthetic stabilizer that ‘clean’ purists typically avoid.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🔬The Clean Lie

Dieux wants you to believe their eye cream is so pure it doesn’t need a traditional preservative. They use a “self-preserving” system — but the stabilizer hiding in there is sodium benzoate, the same synthetic antimicrobial “clean” brands love to trash.

It’s not bad for you. It’s just dishonest marketing. If you’re gonna use a preservative, own it.

2.🧴What You’re Actually Buying

It’s $64 for 15ml of a gel-cream that promises to “support the skin barrier” around your eyes. The viral airless pump is undeniably satisfying — no digging with a pinky.

1

Airless Pump

Keeps oxygen out so actives stay fresh. Also means you can’t get the last 10% out. Annoying.

2

Peptide Complex

Matryxyl 3000 + Syn-Ake — the same peptides in $200 creams. They do work on fine lines.

3

No Fragrance

Zero smell. No essential oils. Your eyes won’t water.

a woman is laying down with her eyes closed

Photo: Masum Rahimi / Unsplash

3.⚠️The Ingredient Trap

Here’s the thing — the formula is genuinely good. But the “clean” framing is a smokescreen. The hero ingredients are solid peptides, glycerin, and squalane. Nothing revolutionary, but well-dosed.

  • Palmitoyl Tripeptide-1: Stimulates collagen around the eye
  • Sodium Benzoate: The synthetic preservative they don’t advertise
  • Glycerin: Hydrates in under 60 seconds
  • Squalane: Lightweight emollient that mimics skin’s oil
white and gray round plastic container

Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash

4.🔍The Reality Check

First pump — it’s a thin gel that disappears in 8 seconds flat. Zero residue. Almost feels like nothing happened, which is weirdly addicting.

Week 3: my undereye texture is smoother. But the “de-puffing” claim? Overhyped. Caffeine isn’t listed high enough to do much. A cold spoon works better.

💡

One Thing: Store it upside down for 10 seconds before first use. The pump needs gravity to prime properly — or you’ll waste 3 pumps of $64 cream.
Cosmetic serums arranged on clear, circular plates.

Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash

5.📝The Honest Verdict

Fine lines softened by about 30% in 4 weeks. No milia. No irritation. But the “clean” label is a distraction — it’s a solid peptide cream that works despite the marketing, not because of it.

Buy if
You have dry or normal undereyes and want a no-fuss peptide cream that layers under makeup
⏭️

Skip if
You’re expecting major de-puffing or have oily skin — the gel can pill if you use too much
💰

Worth it?
Yes, if you value the pump and peptide dose. No, if you just want hydration — drugstore works fine.
three makeup brushes on top of compact powders

Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash

6.💡Final Call

Great formula, dishonest marketing. If you can ignore the “clean” theater, it’s a genuinely good eye cream — just don’t pretend it’s magic.

7.5/10
Good peptides, bad marketing
🛍️

Where to Buy: Direct from Dieux or Sephora. Skip the travel size — you’ll finish it in 2 weeks.