The Ordinary ยท US-Beauty
Best The Ordinary Products for Dry Skin
13 The Ordinary picks that actually work on dry skin โ ranked by editor rating, not by what the brand pushes hardest. Updated 2026.
Single-active minimalism at drugstore prices. Routines are work to build, but the results (and the price) earn the cult.

The Ordinary
9/10 ยท serumSoothing & Barrier Support Serum
The Ordinary's Soothing & Barrier Support Serum is the brand's most ambitious single-product launch โ eight technologies stacked into one $19 bottle aimed squarely at compromised barrier and reactive skin. The roster reads like a sensitive-skin cheat sheet: niacinamide and bisabolol for inflammation control, centella triterpenes (asiaticoside, asiatic acid, madecassic acid) for redness and barrier repair, a ceramide complex with sphingolipids and phytosterols for lipid replenishment, vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) for that signature pink tint and visible calming, EGCG for antioxidant protection, panthenyl triacetate for hydration, and naringenin for additional soothing. What sets this apart from typical centella serums is the depth of the formulation โ most brands pick two or three of these and call it done. The Ordinary loaded all eight into a stable, non-greasy emulsion at the price of a Sephora lip balm. Best used as a daily morning treatment when skin is irritated from actives, sun exposure, or seasonal flare-ups. Layer under moisturizer; plays well with everything except direct acid exfoliation.

The Ordinary
8.7/10 ยท serumMulti-Antioxidant Radiance Serum
The Ordinary's Multi-Antioxidant Radiance Serum is the brand's most polished morning serum โ a daily AM brightener built from eight antioxidant technologies that's easier to use than a pure L-ascorbic acid product and arguably more effective for skin that can't tolerate active vitamin C. Ascorbyl Glucoside is the gentler, more stable vitamin C derivative that hydrolyzes into ascorbic acid on the skin. It's joined by ergothioneine (a potent intracellular antioxidant), stabilized EGCG (green tea polyphenol that stays active in formula), tocotrienols (vitamin E's super-form), Korean ginseng for circulation and glow, and tremella mushroom for hydration. The peptide pair โ Acetyl Tetrapeptide-2 and Heptapeptide-6 โ adds a cell-signaling element rare at this price. The annatto seed extract gives it a faint warm tint that makes skin look immediately more even. Apply morning under sunscreen; the formula is alcohol-free and fragrance-free, so it layers under anything without pilling. At $20, it sits in the sweet spot between drugstore vitamin C derivatives and prestige multi-antioxidant serums that cost five times more.

The Ordinary
8.6/10 ยท oil100% Plant-Derived Squalane
The single-ingredient hero โ 100% sugarcane-derived squalane in a bottle, no fillers, no fragrance, no preservatives, no anything else. Squalane is a saturated, shelf-stable analog of squalene (the lipid your sebaceous glands already make), and the plant-derived version Deciem uses is hydrogenated from sugarcane fermentation rather than shark liver, which used to be the industry default. The molecule sits at the upper end of "non-comedogenic" on every published comedogenicity ranking โ meaning it slides over an oily T-zone without clogging pores in the way mineral oil or coconut oil can. Use cases stack: as a finishing layer over moisturizer to seal in hydration, mixed into foundation to thin a too-matte finish, on cuticles, on hair ends, in winter on the lips. The 30ml bottle at $8-9 is the cheapest entry into squalane as a single-actor ingredient โ adjacent prestige squalane oils (Biossance, Indie Lee) are 3-4x the price for nominally identical INCI. Layers cleanly under everything.

The Ordinary
8.6/10 ยท exfoliantLactic Acid 10% + HA
The Ordinary's gentler AHA โ 10% lactic acid (the largest, most hydrating of the alpha-hydroxy acids) buffered with sodium hyaluronate crosspolymer and Tasmannian pepperberry to soften the sting. The default 'first AHA' recommendation across r/SkincareAddiction precisely because lactic-acid-at-10% reads as a meaningful resurfacer without the cliff-edge irritation of glycolic 7% toner. Sub-$10 pricing for a 15-ingredient minimal deck is the budget exfoliant standard.

The Ordinary
8.5/10 ยท serumMulti-Peptide + Copper Peptides 1% Serum
Deciem's flagship peptide serum and the successor to the discontinued Buffet + Copper Peptides 1% โ eight peptides in one bottle plus copper tripeptide-1 (GHK-Cu) at the high #4 placement, which is the slot that earns the bottle its blue tint and the price tag. The peptide line-up is the most credible single-bottle stack on the market at this price tier: copper tripeptide-1 for tissue repair and signaling, acetyl hexapeptide-8 (the 'Botox-mimic' Argireline) for expression-line softening, pentapeptide-18 for similar muscle-relaxant signaling, palmitoyl tripeptide-1/-38 + tetrapeptide-7 (the Matrixyl 3000 family) for collagen-and-elastin upregulation, plus dipeptide diaminobutyroyl benzylamide diacetate (Syn-Ake) and the ARG-TRP-DIPHENYLGLYCINE peptide (anti-fatigue) rounding it out. The amino acid + sugar NMF blend in the second half of the deck mimics the skin's own moisture factors. Use cases: AM or PM, layered as the treatment step under moisturizer; pairs cleanly with vitamin C in AM (peptides survive C just fine despite older internet folklore). The watery vehicle stays compatible with retinoids in PM. At $32 / 30ml it's the cheapest credible 8-peptide stack in skincare โ adjacent prestige multi-peptide serums (Drunk Elephant Protini, Niod CAIS) sit at 3-4x.

The Ordinary
8.5/10 ยท oil100% Organic Cold-Pressed Rose Hip Seed Oil
The Ordinary's Rose Hip Seed Oil is the textbook example of the brand's 'one ingredient, ruthlessly sourced' philosophy: it is literally just cold-pressed organic Rosa canina seed oil and nothing else. No carrier oils, no preservatives, no fragrance, no antioxidant boosters โ and that purity is the point, because the whole reason to buy cold-pressed rosehip oil is to access its naturally-occurring trans-retinoic acid precursors (a small amount of natural tretinoin and tretinoin-precursors), linoleic acid, and high-density tocopherols intact. Conventionally extracted rosehip oils lose most of these to heat and chemical solvents. Cold-pressing preserves them. The colour (deep golden-orange) and short shelf-life (refrigerate after opening) are visual confirmations the actives haven't been degraded. Use 2-3 drops PM as the final step of a routine, or layer under a heavier night cream. Excellent for mature skin, post-acne hyperpigmentation, and stretch-mark-prone areas. The ~$11 price point makes the premium organic cold-pressed format accessible โ comparable artisan rosehip oils sit at $30-60 for the same volume.

The Ordinary
8.5/10 ยท tonerSaccharomyces Ferment 30% Milky Toner
The Ordinary's Saccharomyces Ferment 30% Milky Toner is Deciem doing essence energy on a Deciem budget โ a 2024 launch that quietly reframes what a $18 toner can contain. Saccharomyces ferment (yeast extract) at 30% is the kind of ingredient that ferment-obsessed K-beauty essences charge $40-80 for: Pitera, Galactomyces, and friends. Saccharomyces ferment is a bioferment liquid produced when yeast metabolises sugars, and it contains a complex mix of amino acids, organic acids, vitamins, peptides, and oligosaccharides that interact with the skin's surface to soften texture, accelerate barrier repair, and provide gentle exfoliation through naturally-produced N-acetyl glucosamine (NAG) โ which The Ordinary specifically calls out as making up 3% of the ferment payload. Squalane in the second position turns the toner milky and converts a watery ferment into something dry-skin-friendly: emollient enough to skip a moisturiser in summer, still light enough to layer under serum in winter. There's almost nothing else in the formula โ eleven ingredients total, no fragrance, no actives stacked on top of the ferment, no preservative theatre. The simplicity is the design. The Ordinary's positioning is that the ferment IS the active; everything else is delivery. At $18 for 100mL, it's three to four times cheaper per millilitre than any prestige ferment essence on the market.

The Ordinary
8.4/10 ยท serumHyaluronic Acid 2% + B5
Three molecular weights of HA + B5 at a cost that embarrasses the prestige shelf.

The Ordinary
8.4/10 ยท cleanserGlycolipid Cream Cleanser
Deciem's biosurfactant cleanser โ a 16-ingredient deck built around glycolipids (sugar-derived microbial surfactants produced via biotech fermentation) instead of the classic sulfate or amphoteric trio. The result is one of the gentlest cream-to-milk cleansers on shelf: behenyl alcohol + polyglyceryl-2 stearate at the top of the deck give it the rich emollient texture, then glycolipids at #4 do the actual lifting work without stripping. Pentylene glycol and glyceryl stearate add a humectant + lipid layer, while the formula skips fragrance, dyes, and essential oils entirely. Marketed for makeup removal โ and yes, it dissolves SPF and light foundation in one pass โ but the real story is sensitivity-tier biocompatibility at $13/150ml. The kind of cleanser dermatologists end up recommending after the third rebuild attempt at a damaged barrier.

The Ordinary
8.3/10 ยท cleanserSqualane Cleanser
An emollient balm cleanser at the price of a foaming one. Squalane Cleanser melts on contact with skin, dissolves makeup and SPF efficiently, then emulsifies with water into a milky lotion that rinses clean. Nothing flashy โ but most balm cleansers in this format cost $35โ45, and this is $14.50. For dry, sensitive, and mature skin or anyone tired of double-cleansing aggressively, this is a quiet hero. Fragrance-free, no essential oils, no irritants. Just squalane + safflower + behenyl alcohol doing their job.

The Ordinary
8.2/10 ยท serumBuffet Multi-Technology Peptide Serum
The Ordinary's flagship peptide serum โ a stack of six peptide complexes (Matrixyl 3000, Matrixyl synthe'6, Argireline, SNAP-8, Syn-Ake-class derivatives) plus hyaluronic acid in a single bottle. Buffet is the cumulative 'aging-prevention' application: not dramatic on day one, slow-build over 8โ12 weeks. Cheap enough to commit to consistent use, formulated stably enough to layer with retinol or acids. Not magic, but the kind of supporting-cast serum that makes the rest of an anti-aging routine more effective.

The Ordinary
8/10 ยท moisturizerNatural Moisturizing Factors + HA
A $9 moisturizer with 11+ amino acids. Bare-bones sensorial, solid-as-rock performance.

The Ordinary
7.8/10 ยท serumArgireline Solution 10%
The single-active peptide play โ 10% Acetyl Hexapeptide-8 (Argireline) in an 11-ingredient water vehicle. The peptide is famously marketed as a "topical Botox" because it inhibits the SNAP-25 protein involved in muscular contraction, and at 10% you're getting roughly the highest concentration sold at retail (most peptide complexes sit at 0.1-0.5%). Real-world results are subtle, slow, and confined to expression lines (forehead, crow's feet) โ not deep static wrinkles, which need retinoids or in-office work. But at $10 for 30ml, the cost-of-experiment math works in a way Matrixyl-and-friends prestige peptide serums never do. Layers cleanly under everything: vitamin C in the AM, retinol in the PM, no incompatibilities. The minimalist 11-ingredient deck is also rare for a "functional" peptide product and reduces the irritation surface area to near zero.