Deconstruct ยท IN-Beauty
Best Deconstruct Products for Oily Skin
4 Deconstruct picks that actually work on oily skin โ ranked by editor rating, not by what the brand pushes hardest. Updated 2026.
Deconstruct is the Indian skincare brand for people who actually open the carton and read every name on the back โ every product spotlights its key actives at the percentage they're used. Multi-active serums, sunscreens, and creams that lean clinical-leaning-millennial. Mid-tier pricing, distribution mostly D2C and Nykaa.

Deconstruct
8.5/10 ยท essenceHydrating Serum (2% Hyaluronic Acid + 1% Niacinamide)
Deconstruct's Hydrating Serum is the most minimalist hydrating step on the Indian market โ 15 ingredients, zero fragrance, zero essential oils, zero marketing fluff. The formula centres on Aquaxyl (xylitylglucoside + anhydroxylitol + xylitol), a patented moisturising complex that works by directing water into the skin's natural moisture reservoirs rather than just sitting on the surface. Hyaluronic acid at 2% provides the multi-weight hydration that every K-beauty essence promises, while 1% niacinamide adds gentle brightening without pushing this into active-serum territory. The black pepper seed extract is a bioavailability enhancer โ it helps the other actives penetrate more effectively. The mineral complex (magnesium, zinc, copper) supports skin's enzymatic functions. At โน699 for 30ml, it's positioned as India's answer to Hada Labo: a stripped-back hydrating layer that does one thing exceptionally well. Use after cleanser, before serum โ the water-thin texture means it absorbs in seconds and layers under everything without pilling.

Deconstruct
8.3/10 ยท serum10% Niacinamide + 1% Zinc Serum
10% niacinamide + 1% zinc Indian serum at a fair price โ chemistry-transparent, no marketing-claim hand-waving.

Deconstruct
8.2/10 ยท exfoliantExfoliating Serum โ 18% AHA + 2% BHA
Deconstruct's Exfoliating Serum is the Indian answer to The Ordinary's AHA 30% + BHA 2% Peeling Solution โ but formulated with more nuance and at an even lower price. The 18% AHA is a multi-acid blend: lactic acid (gentle, hydrating exfoliation), glycolic acid (deep-penetrating texture refinement), tartaric acid (antioxidant AHA from grapes), and malic acid (apple-derived surface-level brightening). The 2% salicylic acid handles oil-soluble pore clearing. Five acids working at different depths and mechanisms is genuinely sophisticated formulation โ this isn't a one-acid-at-high-concentration bludgeon. Green tea extract adds antioxidant support, and lactococcus ferment lysate provides probiotic-derived barrier conditioning that helps the skin tolerate the acid load. The formula is only fifteen ingredients, fragrance-free, and brutally straightforward. At โน649 (~$8), Deconstruct is delivering prescription-grade exfoliation at convenience-store pricing. Use twice weekly, not daily โ this is a treatment, not a toner.

Deconstruct
8.1/10 ยท serumVitamin C Serum โ 10% Vitamin C + 0.5% Ferulic Acid
Deconstruct's Vitamin C Serum is a twelve-ingredient masterclass in how Indian DTC brands are stripping skincare down to what actually works. The 10% 3-O-ethyl ascorbic acid is a stable vitamin C derivative that brightens without the oxidation drama of pure L-ascorbic acid โ it won't turn orange in the bottle or sting on application. The 0.5% ferulic acid is the crucial stabilizer: research from Duke University showed that adding ferulic acid to vitamin C doubles its photoprotective effects, and Deconstruct built that insight directly into the formula. Dictyopteris membranacea (brown algae extract) is an unusual and intelligent inclusion โ it's a tyrosinase inhibitor that works on a completely different melanin pathway than the vitamin C, giving the formula two independent anti-hyperpigmentation mechanisms. Hyaluronic acid and sodium PCA handle hydration, glycerin provides moisture retention, and that's essentially the entire formula. No fragrance, no color, no marketing ingredients. At โน699 (~$9), this is the kind of evidence-driven formulation that makes you question what most vitamin C serums are actually charging for.