I scratched my arm raw on a Tuesday. By Wednesday, this cream had basically called a ceasefire.
You know how most “eczema relief” feels like slathering on paste that just sits there? This actually works because it stops the itch *before* you wreck your skin barrier. That’s the part dermatologists don’t say out loud—they just hand you the tube and nod.
It’s a rich cream (not a lotion). About $16 for 12 oz at CVS. I bought it because the label promised “itch relief” without a prescription—and I was desperate enough to believe it.
Pramoxine Hydrochloride 1%
A topical analgesic that numbs the itch signal. Think of it like lidocaine’s cousin who’s less intense but still gets the job done.
Ceramides
Three of them. They patch up your broken barrier so the itch doesn’t keep coming back like an ex who forgot their stuff.
Colloidal Oatmeal
Not just a Pinterest bath trend. It physically calms inflammation on contact—like a weighted blanket for your angry skin.
Photo: Ira Kuziv / Unsplash
The formula is smart, not fancy. No fragrance, no steroids, no nonsense. The pramoxine kicks in within minutes, while the ceramides do the long-term repair work you actually need.
- Pramoxine HCl: Numbs the itch signal fast – think topical ibuprofen for nerves
- Ceramides 1, 3, 6-II: Rebuild the barrier so the itch has nothing to trigger on
- Colloidal Oatmeal: Anti-inflammatory film that calms redness on contact
- Niacinamide: Helps fade the dark spots you get from scratching
Photo: Curology / Unsplash
Scoops out thick like cold butter. Takes about 20 seconds to melt into skin—but leaves a slightly tacky finish. Not greasy, just… present. You’ll feel it for a minute, then forget about it.
Two weeks in: the itch attacks went from every night to maybe once a week. Downside? It pills if you layer it over a serum. CeraVe doesn’t warn you about that—I’m warning you.
Photo: El S / Unsplash
My flare-ups stopped spreading. The redness faded by 40% in two weeks. Still get dry patches, but they don’t scream at me anymore. Not a cure—just the best truce I’ve made for $16.
Photo: Ramez E. Nassif / Unsplash
It’s not sexy. It’s not Instagrammable. But it’s the first drugstore cream that made me stop scratching long enough to heal.