I bought the Rhode Barrier Restore Cream expecting to feel like a glazed donut. Instead, I got a $38 moisturizer that actually works — which is suspicious, because celebrity skincare usually doesn’t.
The real test: I used it on my left cheek only for a week. My right cheek, on my boring drugstore cream, looked worse. That’s when I stopped caring about Hailey Bieber’s bathroom shelfie.
**SECTION 2: THE HYPE VS. THE JAR**
Rhode calls this a “barrier restore cream” — fancy speak for “your skin is angry and we’re gonna calm it down.” $38 for 1.7 oz. Not cheap. Not insane. Right in the “I’ll try it once” zone.
The texture
Think thick Greek yogurt but lighter — spreads like it’s apologizing for existing.
The pump
Actually works. Doesn’t spit cream at your mirror like some $70 tubes I’ve used.
The smell
Nothing. Zero. Which is either boring or genius — I’ll let you decide.
**SECTION 3: INGREDIENTS THAT EARN THEIR PAYCHECK**
Three peptides and shea butter doing the heavy lifting. No fragrance, no essential oils, no drama. It’s the skincare equivalent of a friend who just listens instead of giving advice.
- Shea Butter: Not greasy somehow — sinks in like it’s being paid by the second
- Peptide complex: Plumps without the Botox appointment
- Squalane: Locks moisture without clogging
- Glycerin: The boring workhorse that actually hydrates
**SECTION 4: THE WEAR TEST**
Out of the tube, it’s thick — like cold butter. But rub it between your fingers and it melts into this silky nothing. Absorbs in 12 seconds flat. My T-zone didn’t revolt.
Week two: I got lazy and skipped a night. My skin didn’t punish me. That’s rare. Most barrier creams leave you dependent — this one lets you have a life.
**SECTION 5: THE HONEST MATH**
My redness dialed down 40%. The weird dry patch near my nose? Gone by day 4. But my fine lines? Still there. It’s a repair cream, not a time machine.
**SECTION 6: FINAL WORD**
It’s a really good moisturizer that happens to have a famous name attached. If Hailey Bieber disappeared tomorrow, this cream would still sell — just slower, to people who actually read ingredients.