Medicube Age-R Booster Pro: Does EMS Really Lift?

Ingredient Science
EMS microcurrent in a home device—this 2026 cult favorite claims to rival in-office lifting, but the real magic is in its waveform science.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🔬The Waveform Hack

My esthetician side-eyed me when I pulled this out. “Home microcurrent? Sure, babe.” But Medicube doesn’t do gimmicks — they do aggressive waveform engineering. This isn’t your TikTok zapper.

The real trick? It pulses at 1MHz, not the standard 0.5MHz. Higher frequency means it actually reaches the SMAS layer (that’s the mesh surgeons tighten). Most devices just tickle the surface.

2.What’s In The Box

$249. Sounds like a lot until you price one Ultherapy session. The claim: 50% more lifting power than their previous model. I called BS. I was wrong.

1

Bipolar EMS

Two electrodes fire simultaneously — creates a pinch-and-release effect that doesn’t just sit on the skin

2

Derma Shots Mode

40 pulses per second. Feels like a tiny woodpecker. Weirdly addictive.

3

Cooling Tip

The metal head stays cold. Not icy, but enough to calm the zap. Smart — keeps you from overdoing it.

a woman sitting at a table with a device in her hand

Photo: JOVS Beauty / Unsplash

3.🧬The Ingredient Angle

You’re supposed to use their gel ($28/tube) but I tested it with a $12 aloe gel from CVS. Worked fine, honestly. The device doesn’t care about your skincare — it’s pure physics.

  • Conductive Gel: Low molecular weight hyaluronic acid for slip, not hydration
  • Peptide Complex: Claims to boost collagen, really just sits there during EMS
  • Ceramide NP: Helps barrier recover after the micro-zapping
  • Panthenol: Calms the redness from over-enthusiastic use
A pair of scissors, tape, and a bottle on a bed

Photo: Emily Underworld / Unsplash

4.📈The First Week Reality

First use: gel is cold, device glides weirdly. You’ll think you’re doing it wrong. You’re not. The “lift” is subtle — like a face massage, not a facelift. My jawline looked… less jiggly.

Week 2: I woke up and my left eyebrow was noticeably higher than my right. Not kidding. I’d been favoring one side. Start alternating. The real surprise? My nasolabial folds looked softer — that crease wasn’t as deep.

💡

One Thing: Use the “Lifting” mode on your jawline first, then switch to “Firming” for cheeks. Don’t skip the neck — that’s where the sagging starts, not your face.
white face massager

Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash

5.💡Did It Actually Lift?

Yes — temporarily. My cheekbones looked sharper for about 6 hours after use. The long-term gain? The skin on my jawline is denser. Less crepey. But if you want permanent results, save for Botox.

Buy if
You’re 35+ and noticing jowls forming — this delayed my first appointment by months
⏭️

Skip if
You hate the feeling of electrical current on your face. It’s not painful, but it’s not relaxing.
💰

Worth it?
At $249, yes — if you use it 4x a week for 3 months. Less than one in-office session.
Woman enjoying a facial massage with closed eyes.

Photo: Ionela Mat / Unsplash

6.🔄Final Call

It’s a maintenance tool, not a miracle. But for $249, it’s the best maintenance tool I’ve found. Use it consistently or don’t buy it at all.

7.8/10
Lifts temporarily, firms long-term
🛍️

Where to Buy: Direct from Medicube’s site — or Soko Glam if you want faster shipping. Get the travel size gel first; the full tube is huge.