Board-Certified Dermatologist · FAAD Beverly Hills, California
Independent · No paid placements Browse the Reviews →
How we test

Independent by design, not by accident.

Every "best of" list online begs one question: who paid for this? On this desk, the answer is no one. Products are bought at retail, scored against a fixed published rubric, and no brand sees a word before you do. This page explains — in full, with nothing held back — exactly how a review here is made.

$0Paid placements, ever
1,500+Products tested & scored
8 wkMinimum test per product
5Weighted scoring criteria
Dr. Sarah Elspeth Vane testing products to editorial standards
No copy approvalNo brand reads a review early
The pledge

No brand has ever paid for a good review.

It is the single rule this review desk is built on, and the reason it exists at all. A recommendation here cannot be bought — not with money, not with gifts, not with access. The following commitments are not aspirations; they are the operating rules every review must satisfy before it publishes.

  • Bought at retail. Products are purchased at full price, like any reader would, unless explicitly noted otherwise.
  • Samples disclosed, never weighted. Unsolicited PR samples are disclosed at the top of the review and do not affect a single point of the score.
  • No copy approval. Brands have no say over wording, scores, or whether they are included at all.
  • No early access. No company sees a review before it is published — there are no embargoed previews and no "right of reply" baked into the score.
  • Affiliate links earn their place. A link appears only after a product has already earned a recommendation on merit, and a commission never moves a ranking.
  • Conflicts disclosed. Any relationship, sample, or potential bias is stated plainly at the top of every review.
The promise in one line

If a product is recommended here, it is because it earned the recommendation under testing — full stop. There is no second, commercial reason hiding behind the first.

"My job is to tell you which actives are worth it — and to have no financial reason to lie about it." — Dr. Sarah Elspeth Vane, FAAD
Why this matters for women 40+: mature, peri- and post-menopausal skin is precisely the demographic most heavily marketed to, and least often told the unvarnished truth. The rules above exist so that you are reading a clinical judgement, not a media buy.
The scoring rubric

Five weighted criteria. Scored 0–10 each. One final number.

Every product, in every category, is judged against the same fixed standard — not against the trend of the season and not against whatever the brand wants emphasized. Each criterion is scored from 0 to 10, then weighted to produce a single score out of 10, reported to one decimal. Here is what each one measures, and why it carries the weight it does.

Evidence · 30%

Does the science hold up?

The quality of the clinical data for each active at the concentration actually used — not the headline claims a brand makes for an ingredient in the abstract. A well-studied molecule under-dosed earns little here. Weighted heaviest because evidence is the whole point: it is the difference between a treatment and a hope.

Formulation · 25%

Is it built properly?

Actual concentration, delivery system, pH, stability, packaging, and the supporting cast of ingredients. A brilliant active in an unstable, badly buffered, or air-exposed formula is a wasted active. This is where elegant marketing and honest chemistry most often part ways — so it is weighted second.

Tolerability · 20%

Will mature skin cope?

Irritation and sensitization risk, and suitability for the drier, more reactive, barrier-fragile skin common after 40. The strongest formula is useless if your skin can't keep using it. Weighted deliberately high here because tolerability is what determines whether a product is abandoned in week two — the most common reason a routine fails.

Elegance & adherence · 15%

Will you actually use it?

Texture, finish, scent, and the daily friction of using it — the unglamorous truth that the best skincare is the routine you'll still be following in a year. A serum that pills, stings, or feels unpleasant gets left in the drawer. Adherence is efficacy by another name, which is why it earns its own weight.

Value · 10%

Is it worth the money?

Cost per use weighed against what you actually get — not sticker price in isolation. A £15 formula can out-value a £150 one, and frequently does. Weighted lightest on purpose: price should inform a recommendation, but it must never outrank whether the product works and whether your skin can tolerate it.

The weighting at a glance

Evidence
30%
Formulation
25%
Tolerability
20%
Elegance
15%
Value
10%

Bars are proportional to weight. The total is always 100%, and the formula never changes mid-category.

How products are sourced

Bought, not gifted.

The simplest way to keep a review honest is to pay for the product like everyone else. That is the default here, and the exceptions are narrow and always disclosed.

The overwhelming majority of what is tested on this desk is purchased at full retail, from the same shelves and websites you would use. There is no brand portal, no preferential pricing, and no arrangement under which a company supplies products in exchange for coverage. When a product is bought, the brand usually has no idea it is being tested until the review is live.

Occasionally an unsolicited PR sample arrives unprompted. When one is used in a review, two things are true without exception:

  • It is disclosed at the top of the review, by name, so you know exactly what arrived for free.
  • It is scored identically to a purchased product. A free sample earns no goodwill, no benefit of the doubt, and not a single extra point.

Brands cannot send a product to be reviewed as a transaction. Mailing in a box does not buy a place on the desk, a ranking, or a kinder reading. If a sample isn't worth testing on its merits, it isn't tested.

In plain terms

If you ever see a product praised here, assume it was bought — and if it wasn't, you'll be told so in the first paragraph.

The testing protocol

Eight weeks, minimum. Six months in the field.

Skincare results are slow by nature — collagen change in particular is measured in months, not days. A protocol that rewards a first-week glow would mislead the very readers this desk is written for. So testing is deliberately patient.

Minimum 8 weeks per product

Each formula is used consistently for at least eight weeks before it earns a score. That is long enough to see real texture, tone, and tolerability — and long enough to catch the products that look promising at first and disappoint by week six.

Six-month field test

Across a category, the full field is tested over roughly six months. This captures seasonal shifts, packaging that degrades over time, and the slow-building results — firming, pigment, fine lines — that a short trial would miss entirely.

Volunteer panel, ages 41–63

Where a product is panel-tested, it goes on a matched volunteer panel of women aged 41 to 63 — chosen so findings reflect mature, peri- and post-menopausal skin, not a 25-year-old's. The relevance is the point.

  • Each formula is judged on a defined section of the face, or on the matched panel, never by impression alone.
  • Tolerability is observed throughout the ramp-up — the most failure-prone window — not only at the finish.
  • Photography and notes are taken on a fixed schedule so that "better" means measurably better, not remembered better.
  • A product that can't be tolerated long enough to complete the protocol is reported as exactly that.
Money & conflicts

How this is funded — in plain English.

Trust requires knowing how the lights stay on. Here is the whole of it, with no euphemisms.

Affiliate disclosure

Some links on the review pages are affiliate links. If you buy through one, this site may earn a small commission — at no additional cost to you; you pay the same price you would have paid anyway. That is the second, minor source of funding behind the reviews. It comes with three hard limits:

  • A commission never influences a score, a ranking, or whether a product is recommended.
  • An affiliate link appears only after a product has already earned its place under the rubric — never as the reason for it.
  • Plenty of recommended products carry no affiliate link at all, and plenty of well-monetized products are panned anyway. The two facts are kept entirely separate.

Eighteen years of clinical dermatology — and tens of thousands of patient consultations — are the foundation behind these reviews. The reviews are not a business that needs you to buy anything, which is exactly why they can afford to tell you not to.

Conflict-of-interest policy

Any relationship that could reasonably be seen to colour a judgement is disclosed at the top of the relevant review — a received sample, a brand connection, a speaking engagement, anything. Where a genuine conflict exists that disclosure alone can't neutralize, the product is not scored.

  • No paid brand ambassadorships, spokesperson roles, or "partner" arrangements with skincare companies.
  • No equity in, or board seat at, a brand under review.
  • No fee, gift, or hospitality accepted in exchange for coverage, placement, or a particular score.
  • Professional research funding and disclosures are listed separately on the About page.
Standing disclosure: Reviews reflect the independent professional opinion of Dr. Sarah Elspeth Vane and are educational, not individualized medical advice. Affiliate links may earn a commission at no additional cost to you and never influence rankings.
The awards

What each badge actually means.

A handful of products in each category earn a badge. They are not decoration — each one answers a specific question, so you can find the right product for your skin, not just the top of the table.

Editor's Choice

The best overall in its category

The single highest weighted score — the product that best balances evidence, formulation, tolerability, elegance, and value. If you want the strongest all-rounder and your skin tolerates the active, this is where to start.

Best Value

The most performance per pound

Not the cheapest, but the best ratio of results to cost. Often a quietly excellent formula at a fraction of the prestige price — proof that a high price tag and a high score are very different things.

Best for Sensitive Skin

The gentlest effective option

The product that delivers real results with the lowest irritation and sensitization risk on the panel. Awarded with reactive, barrier-fragile, and post-menopausal skin specifically in mind.

Dermatologist's Daily Driver

The one most people will stick with

The forgiving, dependable workhorse — the formula handed to most patients first because it pairs solid efficacy with the kind of everyday usability that keeps a routine going for years.

Accuracy & updates

A review is a living document.

Formulas change, prices move, and new evidence arrives. A recommendation that was right two years ago can quietly become wrong. So reviews are maintained, not abandoned.

  • Reviews are revisited on a regular cycle and whenever something material changes — a new clinical study, a price shift, or a product discontinuation. Every review carries an "Updated" date so you can see how current it is.
  • Reformulations are flagged. When a brand changes a formula, the old verdict no longer applies. A reformulated product is re-tested before its score stands, and the change is noted in the review rather than silently carried over.
  • Corrections are made openly. If a factual error is found, it is fixed and acknowledged — not deleted quietly. Getting it right matters more than appearing to have been right.
  • Scores can fall as well as rise. A former favourite that is reformulated or undercut by better evidence will lose its place. Nothing is grandfathered in on reputation.
Spotted something out of date?

If a product appears to have been reformulated or repriced since a review published, please let us know — reader notes are one of the most reliable ways reviews get flagged for re-testing.

The questions readers ask first

Independence, in your own words.

How do you make money?
One way, fully transparent. The reviews may earn a small affiliate commission when you buy through a link — at no extra cost to you, and only on products that have already earned a recommendation on their own merit. No brand can pay for placement, a ranking, or a kinder score. There is no hidden revenue stream.
Do you take free products?
The default is to buy everything at full retail. Occasionally an unsolicited PR sample arrives; when one is used in a review it is disclosed at the top by name and scored exactly like a purchased product — no goodwill, no extra points. A brand mailing in a box does not buy coverage, a place on the desk, or a softer reading.
Can a brand get a review changed?
No. There is no copy approval and no early access — no company sees a review before it publishes, and none can edit, soften, or remove one afterward. The only changes ever made are corrections of fact, re-scores after a genuine reformulation, and routine updates — all of which are noted openly, never made to please a brand.
Are these reviews a substitute for seeing a dermatologist?
No. The reviews and Journal are educational and reflect professional opinion, but they are not a diagnosis or a treatment plan for your individual skin. For anything medical — a changing mole, a persistent rash, or a condition that isn't improving — please see a board-certified dermatologist near you.
Now you know how it's made

Read a review you can actually trust.

See the rubric in action across retinoids, vitamin C, sunscreens, and more — every score earned, none of it bought.