So Ourself sent me this serum. The pitch: “retinol results, zero irritation.” The price: $88 for 1 oz. The reality: they’re playing word games with “non-toxic.” Their proprietary “microdose” tech? It’s just encapsulated retinoid esters—not vitamin A itself. That’s clever marketing, not chemistry. The real story? They swapped one irritant for a less-studied one, then slapped a green label on it.
🧪 **What You’re Actually Paying For**
It’s a lightweight serum, $88. Claims to smooth lines and brighten without the purge. I tested it because I wanted to believe a retinol alternative could actually work without making me peel like a snake.
– **Microdose Delivery** – Liposomes that supposedly release actives slowly. Feels like nothing on skin.
– **Adaptogen Complex** – Ashwagandha and Rhodiola. Calming in theory, but the concentration is a secret.
– **Squalane Base** – Lightweight. Absorbs in 12 seconds. Doesn’t clog.
📝 **The Ingredient Reality Check**
The hero is *granactive retinoid* (hydroxypinacolone retinoate)—a derivative that’s gentler than retinol, but also way less proven for anti-aging. The “clean” claim relies on excluding 2,000+ “bad” ingredients, but they still use phenoxyethanol (a preservative linked to skin sensitivity). The adaptogens are at the bottom of the list—basically aromatherapy.
– **Granactive Retinoid**: Milder retinol alternative, but long-term data is thin
– **Squalane**: Hydrates, but it’s in every serum for $20 less
– **Ashwagandha**: Stress-reducing for your skin? In theory, not in this dose
– **Phenoxyethanol**: Preservative, fine for most, but not “clean” by strict standards
⚠️ **Texture & The Waiting Game**
First pump: watery, almost greaseless. Disappears before you finish rubbing. No sting. No smell. That’s the good part. By week two, my skin looked… exactly the same. No glow. No irritation. Just a very expensive nothing. What surprised me: the bottle is heavy glass with a dropper that sucks—literally, it only picks up half a dose.
💡 **One Thing** – Apply to slightly damp skin. The squalane spreads better and you use less product.
✅ **Did It Actually Work?**
After three weeks: my fine lines stayed fine. One small breakout cleared—but that could’ve been random. What didn’t change: texture, brightness, or firmness. For $88, I expected *something*. It’s not bad—it’s just not worth the hype.
– **Buy if** – You have sensitive skin that hates retinol and you want a placebo-level gentle option
– **Skip if** – You want visible results in under a month
– **Worth it?** – No. Get a $30 retinaldehyde serum instead.
🌿 **Bottom Line**
It’s a well-formulated moisturizer pretending to be a treatment. Clean? Sure, by their definition. Effective? Not for the price.
**3.2/10** – Gentle but forgettable
🛍️ **Where to Buy** – Direct from Ourself’s site or Sephora. Try the travel size first—don’t commit.