Cipher Skincare HPR Serum: Clean or Clever Marketing?

Greenwashing Check
This futuristic-looking serum claims to be ‘pharmacy-grade clean’—but one ingredient on the label says otherwise.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🔬Clean Girl or Green Lie?

This serum looks like it belongs in a sci-fi movie—opaque white bottle, minimalist font, zero bullshit. The brand calls it “pharmacy-grade clean,” which is a phrase that doesn’t legally mean anything.

But here’s the thing: the ingredient list includes Phenoxyethanol. It’s a common preservative, totally safe at low levels. But “clean beauty” purists lose their shit over it. So either they’re not as clean as they claim, or they’re smart enough to keep their product from growing mold. I respect the hypocrisy.

2.🧴What’s Actually in the Bottle

It’s $78 for 30ml. A retinoid serum with CoQ10 that promises smoothing, firming, and “recovery” (whatever that means). I bought it because they claimed it wouldn’t irritate my skin like retinol does.

1

HPR (Hydroxypinacolone Retinoate)

A retinoid ester that converts directly in skin—no multi-step activation, less redness.

2

CoQ10

Antioxidant that declines with age. This one’s encapsulated, so it actually penetrates instead of sitting on top like a sad little shield.

3

Squalane + Ceramides

Basic barrier support. Not revolutionary, but necessary when you’re slapping on a retinoid.

Mecca cosmetic set

Photo: Harper Sunday / Unsplash

3.🔍The Ingredient They Hope You Don’t Google

The hero is HPR—it’s the gentlest retinoid I’ve used, no joke. But the real story is the delivery system. Most serums dump ingredients on your face and pray. This one uses a liposomal encapsulation that actually gets HPR and CoQ10 into cells instead of just sitting there looking expensive.

  • HPR: Smoother texture with 1/4 the irritation of retinol
  • CoQ10: Helps mitochondria produce energy for skin repair—sounds bro-sciencey, actually real
  • Phenoxyethanol: The ‘dirty’ preservative keeping this serum alive on your shelf
  • Squalane: Non-comedogenic moisture that won’t break you out
circular white Onne on brown figure

Photo: ONNE Beauty / Unsplash

4.📋Texture: Gel Meets Oil

It’s a thin, almost watery gel that turns silky on contact. Absorbs in about 12 seconds—no sticky residue. Smells like nothing, which I prefer over “natural” essential oils that burn your eyes.

Week 2: I woke up with a small purge on my chin. Not angry, just… annoyed. By week 3, my forehead texture was noticeably smoother. The fine lines around my mouth? Still there. But they looked less like deep crevices and more like gentle suggestions.

💡

One Thing: Apply to damp skin—not wet, just damp. It spreads better and you need half the amount. This bottle lasts 3 months instead of 6 weeks.
5.🧪The Results Nobody Paid For

After 4 weeks: fewer closed comedones on my forehead, skin looks slightly plumper, and no peeling or redness. My fine lines didn’t disappear—they never do—but makeup sat better. The CoQ10 might actually be doing something long-term, but I can’t prove that in a month.

Buy if
Your skin hates retinol but wants retinol results. Also if you’re 30+ and starting anti-aging without the drama.
⏭️

Skip if
You’re on a strict budget or already use a prescription retinoid. This won’t out-perform tret.
💰

Worth it?
$78 is steep, but you get what you pay for in delivery tech. One bottle lasts 2.5-3 months.
6.⚠️The Honest Cut

It’s not “clean”—that’s marketing nonsense. But it’s effective, well-formulated, and the first retinoid I’ve used without wanting to peel my face off. That’s worth more than a buzzword.

7.5/10
Smart retinoid, dumb marketing
🛍️

Where to Buy: Direct from Cipher Skincare’s site—they do 15% off your first order. Spring for the travel size ($28) if you’re iffy.