You slap a sheet mask on, wait ten minutes, and peel off a face that looks like someone pulled it backwards. That’s the promise. Mediheal’s CO2 Lift Mask fizzes up like a science experiment on your skin — and the first time I tried it, my roommate thought I was doing a TikTok prank.
The real reason this matters: instant gratification is skincare crack. And this one actually delivers a visible lift — but only if you understand what’s happening under all that foam.
It’s a two-step sheet mask system. You mix a powder into a gel, spread it on the mask, slap it on, and wait for the bubbles to do their thing. ~$8-10 per mask. The claim: your face looks tighter in under 15 minutes.
CO2 Bubble Reaction
The powder + gel combo creates carbon dioxide — that fizzy feeling isn’t just for show
Vulcanized Rubber Sheet
Thick, bouncy, doesn’t drip — actually stays put while you text
Two-Step Process
You have to activate it yourself. Messy? A little. Satisfying? Extremely.
Photo: Natallia Photo / Unsplash
Here’s where it gets interesting. The CO2 isn’t just making bubbles — it’s supposedly boosting microcirculation and oxygenating the skin. But the real workers are in the gel base. Niacinamide for brightness, adenosine for wrinkle smoothing, and hyaluronic acid for plumping. The CO2 is the delivery system, not the magic.
- Niacinamide: evens tone, calms redness from the bubble irritation
- Adenosine: legit anti-wrinkle ingredient Korea uses in everything
- Hyaluronic Acid: sucks moisture in while the mask seals it
- CO2: increases blood flow temporarily — that’s the “lift”
First 30 seconds: cold, wet, and then… fizzing. It tingles. Not painful — like a mild soda on your face. The mask gets warm as the reaction peaks. Weirdest texture I’ve felt since those jelly masks from 2016. When you peel it off, your skin is damp, not greasy.
Week 2: I stopped expecting a facelift and started noticing my pores looked smaller. That’s the real win. The tightness fades after an hour — but the texture improvement sticks around for a day or two.
Yes — but only if you define “work” as temporary firming and better texture. My jawline looked slightly more defined for about 4 hours. Fine lines around my mouth were softer. What didn’t change: deep wrinkles, sagging from weight loss, or actual skin structure. This is a party trick, not a procedure.
The CO2 Lift Mask is not a facelift. It’s a really good optical illusion with some decent skincare benefits. Use it when you need to look alive for photos — not when you need to fix your skin.