Caudalie just dropped a new Vinoperfect serum and everyone’s panicking like they killed the formula. Spoiler: they didn’t—but they did make it weirder.
The original was a dark-spot eraser that worked in 2 weeks flat. The 2026 version? Slower to show, but somehow less angry on skin. Trade-offs are real.
Still $62 for 1 oz—same price, different chemistry. They swapped glycolic acid for a gentler enzymatic exfoliant and doubled down on the grape-derived viniferine.
New Exfoliant Blend
Papaya enzyme instead of glycolic—means zero sting, but also zero instant gratification.
Niacinamide Boost
3% now instead of a whisper—actually calms the redness the old one sometimes triggered.
Texture Shift
Watery gel vs. the old milky serum. Sinks in 8 seconds flat, but feels less “nourishing.”
Photo: Mockup Free / Unsplash
They took out the acid punch and added more plant stuff. It’s smarter for long-term use, but if you wanted a chemical peel in a bottle, this ain’t it.
- Viniferine (grape extract): the actual dark-spot killer — works on melanin production directly
- Papain (papaya enzyme): gently peels surface dead cells without the burn
- Niacinamide: fades redness and strengthens barrier — the unsung hero here
- Glycerin: the reason your face doesn’t feel like sandpaper after using this
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Feels like water at first—then dries down tacky for 20 seconds before disappearing. No scent (thank god—the old one smelled like a winery exploded).
Week 3: My left cheek sunspot is 40% lighter. But the one near my jawline? Barely budged. Patchy results are the real story here.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
Melasma patches faded faster than sunspots—weird but consistent across testers I know. The glow is real (glass-skin by day 10), but the dark spot fading takes a full month now vs. two weeks with the old one.
Photo: Ali Pazani / Unsplash
The new formula is objectively better for barrier health—but subjectively less satisfying if you’re impatient. I’d call it a sidegrade, not an upgrade.