Everyone says hyaluronic acid is a desert for your face if the air is dry. I tested it in my bone-dry winter apartment.
The real issue isn’t the ingredient — it’s how you use it. This serum is a moisture magnet, and magnets can work both ways.
It’s The Ordinary‘s Hyaluronic Acid 2% + B5. $7. I bought it to see if the internet’s favorite hydrator could actually be a villain.
Texture
Slightly sticky, clear gel — not a runny liquid.
Absorption
Sinks in under 30 seconds on damp skin.
Layering
Plays nice with moisturizer, pills under silicone-based primers.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
It’s not one type of HA, it’s a weight class. Different molecule sizes target different skin layers. The B5 is the quiet repair crew.
- Low-Molecular HA: Penetrates deeper
- High-Molecular HA: Hydrates surface
- Crosspolymer HA: Creates a film
- Vitamin B5: Supports barrier repair
Photo: Element5 Digital / Unsplash
Feels like spreading a thin layer of aloe — a faint tackiness that disappears. No scent, just science.
Used it wrong (on dry skin, heater blasting) and got tight. Used it right? Game over for the myth.
Photo: Element5 Digital / Unsplash
Fine lines from dehydration looked softer. No miracle plumping. Did not cure my actual dry skin — needed cream on top.
Photo: Felipe Vieira / Unsplash
It doesn’t dry your skin. User error dries your skin. This serum is a tool, not a magic potion.