Is Ourself Skin Barrier Serum Actually Clean? Ingredient Deep Dive

Greenwashing Check
Ourself’s ‘clean’ label sounds perfect—but we found a preservative blend that raises real red flags.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
🔬 **The “Clean” Serum That Isn’t**

You know that feeling when a brand screams “clean” and your wallet just opens? That was me with Ourself Skin Barrier Serum. $68 later, I flipped the bottle over and found phenoxyethanol + ethylhexylglycerin. Not the worst offenders, sure. But for a brand that markets itself as a purity cult? That’s like finding a cigarette in a yoga studio.

The real issue: “clean” isn’t regulated. It’s a vibe, not a promise. This blend is standard in drugstore moisturizers. For this price, I expect something closer to water-and-plant-magic. Instead, I got a preservative system that’s fine *if* you’re not buying into the hype.

🧴 **What You’re Actually Paying For**

It’s a lightweight serum, $68 for 1 oz. Claims to “repair the skin barrier in 7 days.” That’s aggressive. I tried it because my winter face felt like parchment.

1

Squalane base

Slippery, not greasy. Absorbs in about 12 seconds — my phone screen stays fingerprint-free.

2

Peptide complex

Sounds fancy. Mostly just plumping water retention. Not a wrinkle eraser.

3

Ceramide blend

Three types. Nice. But concentration is low — you’d need half the bottle per use to match a drugstore ceramide cream.

⚠️ **The Ingredient That Made Me Pause**

Hero ingredients? Squalane (hydrates), ceramides (seals), peptides (firmness). All fine. But the preservative blend is where it gets weird. They use phenoxyethanol to keep it shelf-stable. It’s common. But “clean” brands usually skip it for something like leucidal or radish root ferment. This feels like a shortcut.

  • Squalane: Lightweight moisture, zero greasiness
  • Ceramide NP: Barrier repair, but underdosed
  • Peptide complex: Temporary plumping, not structural repair
  • Phenoxyethanol: Standard preservative, red flag for ‘clean’ label

✅ **First Touch, Second Thoughts**

Texture is a watery gel. Smells like… nothing. That’s good. First pump felt like cold silk — sinks in before you can blink. Week one: my skin looked okay. Not transformed. Just… fine.

Week two: surprise. My t-zone stopped flaking. That’s real. But the rest of my face? Same. It’s like the serum only works on the parts that already behave. Weird.

💡 **One Thing**
Layer it over damp skin. Otherwise it pills under sunscreen like eraser shavings.

📊 **Did It Actually Work?**

Measurable change: less flaking on my nose. Everything else — texture, redness, fine lines — stayed the same. It’s not a dud. But it’s not a miracle either.

Buy if
Your skin is mildly dry and you want a light, non-greasy step that won’t break you out.
⏭️

Skip if
You need serious barrier repair or have sensitive skin that reacts to phenoxyethanol.
💰

Worth it?
No. $68 for 1 oz of ‘fine’ is a lot. A $15 tube of CeraVe cream does more.

💡 **Final Call**

It’s a decent serum pretending to be a great one. The clean label is marketing, not science. If you want barrier repair without the hype, save your cash.

6.5/10
Decent serum, overhyped clean label
🛍️

Where to Buy: Direct from Ourself or Sephora. Don’t buy full-size — get the travel set first. You’ll know by week one if it’s for you.