How safe is it?

Ingredients (75)

Popular Ingredients In This Product
All Ingredients
63 more...
*** The source of Glycerin is not specified by the manufacturer and could be from Coconut Derivatives (does NOT exclude all fragrances) or Soy or Zea Mays (Corn)
Legal Disclaimer - Actual product packaging and materials may contain more and different product and ingredient information than what is shown on our website. We recommend that you do not rely solely on the information presented and that you always read labels, warnings, and directions before using or consuming a product.

Product Description

SkinCeuticals' Brightening Skin System is a four-step regimen that combats the appearance of discoloration and skin tone unevenness. Potent ingredients, such as phloretin, ferulic, kojic acid and retinol, are found in these travel-size formulas to correct stubborn skin care concerns and boost your skin's radiance.

SkinCeuticals' Brightening Skin System:

Phloretin CF (30 ml): a light, triple antioxidant serum that provides advanced environmental protection and diminishes the appearance of fine lines and skin discoloration.
Discoloration Defense (30 ml): a multi-phase serum formulated to reduce the appearance of multiple types of discoloration, including stubborn brown patches.
Retinol 0.5 (30 ml): pure, highly concentrated retinol in a stabilized delivery system that visibly improves the appearance of skin discolorations, uneven tone and fine lines and wrinkles.
Physical Fusion UV Defense SPF 50 (50 ml): a broad-spectrum sunscreen with a universal tint to enhance natural skin tone and help protect against damaging UVA/UVB rays for brighter, more radiant-looking skin.

Key Benefits:

Diminishes the appearance of discoloration
Promotes even skin tone
Boosts skin's radiance

Tip: Retinol is photosensitizing—using broad-spectrum sun protection is a must when retinol is part of your skin care regimen. As a precaution, retinol products should not be used by pregnant women, or women who intend to become pregnant in the near future. Though there are no reports of topical retinol having any negative effect on fetal development, some problems have been reported with ingested retinoic acid.

Hang tight. We're thinking.