You’re putting it on damp skin, aren’t you? That’s the first mistake. It drives the retinol deeper than you want — hello, irritation.
The real trick is in the buffer. Not just any moisturizer, but the right one, applied at the right time.
This is The Ordinary‘s Retinol 0.5% in Squalane. For $7, it promises real retinoid results without the prescription. I tried it because the price made skepticism impossible.
Mid-Strength
0.5% is the sweet spot — strong enough to work, gentle enough to not ruin your week.
Oil-Based
The squalane base is a genius move. It slows absorption, which actually prevents irritation.
No Nonsense
The packaging is a medical-grade dropper. It feels clinical, not cute.
Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash
It’s a short list. The retinol is suspended in squalane, a plant-derived oil that mimics your skin’s own moisture. This isn’t a cocktail — it’s a shot.
- Retinol 0.5%: The star. Converts to retinoic acid to speed up cell turnover.
- Squalane: The vehicle. A hydrating oil that’s non-comedogenic.
- No Fragrance: Critical. Irritation isn’t masked as a ‘tingle’.
- No Silicones: It’s a true oil, so it sits on top of water-based serums.
Texture is a light, slippery oil. It absorbs in about 90 seconds — leaves a slight sheen, not greasy. Smells like… nothing. Pure lab.
Week 2, I got overconfident and used it three nights in a row. My chin retaliated with peeling. Lesson learned: this stuff demands respect, not a sprint.
After 6 weeks, my pores on my cheeks look vacuumed. Texture is smoother. But it did nothing for my stubborn hormonal chin spots — a humbling reality check.
This isn’t a magic wand. It’s a precise, potent, and slightly boring tool that works if you follow the rules. The price is almost an insult to other brands.