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Honest Beauty Product Reviews
Real reviews from real women. We test the latest skincare, makeup, and beauty products so you don't waste your money. From drugstore finds to luxury splurges, discover which products are worth the hype and which ones to skip. Get honest ratings, detailed ingredient breakdowns, and real before-and-after results to help you make confident beauty purchases.
Peel the sticker off in the morning and there is, visibly, a little white circle of whatever was inside your spot sitting on the back of the patch. That oddly fascinating reveal is what keeps the £8.66 Dots for Spots pack on regular reorder for thousands of Amazon UK shoppers, but it is also where the product splits its reviewers.
It is the concealer doing five different jobs at once: covering cold sores for weddings, blurring under-eye circles on 50-year-old skin, contouring drag faces, and standing in for a £25 NARS bottle. We pulled apart 100 recent buyer reviews to work out where the £7.85 e.l.f. Hydrating Camo actually delivers, and where the bottle bites back.
Bare-face users keep calling it the best SPF they've ever tried. Foundation wearers keep complaining about pilling. The COSRX Ultra-Light Invisible is a brilliant £10.99 sunscreen with one very specific Achilles heel, and we look at exactly who fits in which camp.
The label says 7 days. Some buyers say first use. Others are still waiting at week three. A small but loud minority got chemical burns. Before you buy a £14.46 stick of 7% glycolic acid because TikTok told you to, here is what the timeline actually looks like, who lands where, and the one rule that stops most of the bad reactions.
It's sold as a body oil spray for very dry, sensitive skin. Read enough reviews and you find people using it after shaving, on their kids, as a chlorine barrier in the pool, on the face, on the hair, and on psoriasis flares. The £7 bottle has quietly become a multitasker.
Most cleansers at this price point are a coin flip. NIVEA Derma Skin Clear Wash Gel is something stranger: a salicylic acid wash that buyers either credit with clearing years of breakouts or blame for setting their skin on fire. We pulled apart the reviews to figure out which group you're likely to land in.
Marketed for dry hair, priced at £3.99, and stocked in nearly every UK health-food aisle. So why do some buyers swear it cured their itchy scalp while others say it left their hair drier and greasier than before?
Something has shifted with Just For Men M35. Loyal users of five, ten, fifteen years are suddenly reporting itching, burning and chemical reactions they never had before. We read all 100 of the most recent verified reviews and the picture that emerged was more complicated than the 4.4-star average suggests.
A long-standing drugstore favourite quietly swapped spring flowers for watermelon, and a chunk of loyal buyers are not quiet about it. Here's what the new formula actually delivers, who's loving it, and who's reaching for the old blue pack instead.
A drag queen complimented one reviewer's skin. A 65-year-old says it doesn't sit in her creases. And yet a quarter of buyers gave it one or two stars. The pattern in the reviews is so clear it almost reads like two different products.
Strange thing about a sun cream review, the most-quoted feature of Piz Buin SPF 30 isn't the SPF rating. It's the scent, which buyers keep saying smells like every summer they've ever had. We dug into 100 recent reviews to find out where the cream actually delivers and where it lets people down.
It's not often a single skincare jar gets fan letters from a 28-year-old daughter, her 59-year-old mum, and a 77-year-old grandmother all at once. The Medicube Triple Collagen Cream pulls that off, mostly, with a few asterisks worth knowing before you press buy.