I almost didn’t buy this because the packaging looks like a generic skincare brand from 2005. Then I flipped it over and literally laughed out loud in the Walmart aisle.
The first five ingredients are identical to the $52 Tatcha Water Cream. Same order. Same concentration structure. The only difference? This one costs $10 and you can buy it next to a bag of frozen broccoli.
This is the Equate Beauty Hydrating Gel Cream — $9.97 for 1.7 oz. The claim that got me: “same hydrating technology as luxury brands.” I rolled my eyes, bought it anyway.
Gel-to-water texture
Turns from a solid gel into a liquid splash the second it hits your skin. No white cast, no pilling under makeup.
Fragrance-free
No grandma rose or “clean” cucumber nonsense. Just nothing. My reactive skin didn’t even twitch.
Absorption speed
10 seconds. I timed it. You can apply sunscreen immediately after without that slimy slip feeling.
Photo: Ali Pazani / Unsplash
No filler fluff. This is a stripped-down formula that relies on three proven humectants and nothing fancy. The ingredient list is shorter than most moisturizers I own — and that’s a compliment.
- Glycerin: Draws water into skin without feeling sticky
- Dimethicone: Sits on top to seal everything in — non-comedogenic
- Butylene Glycol: Helps other ingredients absorb deeper
- Water (Aqua): First ingredient. Hydration base, not filler
Photo: Dominik Vanyi / Unsplash
Scooped out a pea-sized amount. Feels like cool jelly on your fingertip — the kind that wants to slide off. Applied to damp skin and it sank in so fast I thought I forgot to put it on. No residue. No film. Just… done.
Week two: my forehead lines looked less like a topographical map. But here’s the thing — if you’re currently peeling from retinol or have lizard-level dry patches, this alone won’t cut it. You need an occlusive on top. Think of this as the hydrating step, not the sealing step.
Fine lines around my eyes looked less pronounced by day 4 — not gone, but definitely plumped. My skin stayed bouncy through 8 hours of central heating. What didn’t change: my chin flaking (needed a heavier cream there) and my T-zone oil production (still normal, not less).
This is the best $10 I’ve spent on skincare this year. It won’t replace your heavy night cream, but for daytime hydration at a price that feels like a typo? Buy it. Your wallet will thank you.