Neutrogena messed with a classic — and the beauty forums are in chaos.
The old Hydro Boost Gel-Cream was a no-brainer for dehydrated skin. The new one? It’s a different beast. Texture, finish, everything.
It’s still a hyaluronic acid moisturizer from Neutrogena (~$25). They promised “improved hydration.” But the devil’s in the details.
Fragrance-Free
Gone is the original’s light scent — a win for sensitive skin.
New Preservative System
They swapped parabens for phenoxyethanol. A clean-beauty move, but it can sting for some.
Texture Shift
The biggest gripe. It’s less of a bouncy gel-cream, more of a standard lotion.
Photo: Lina Verovaya / Unsplash
Hyaluronic acid is still the star, holding water to your skin. Glycerin backs it up. The real story is what they added — and removed.
- Hyaluronic Acid: Binds moisture to skin
- Glycerin: Humectant workhorse
- Dimethicone: Provides that silky slip
- Phenoxyethanol: The new, potentially sting-y preservative
Photo: kevin laminto / Unsplash
Applies smoothly — almost too smoothly. Missing that distinctive, cool-gel quench. Absorbs fine, leaves a slightly tackier film than before.
After two weeks, my skin was hydrated. But zero “wow” factor. It just… existed. The magic was gone.
It prevented flakiness. That’s it. No extra glow, no bouncy skin feeling. A basic hydrator.
They fixed a “problem” no one had and lost the charm. It’s fine. Just painfully fine.