What 4 Weeks of a $13.99 Korean Cream Actually Does to Skin — Measured in a Lab
Skincare marketing has a measurement problem. Every cream promises "visible results" — almost none of them will tell you what was measured, on whom, or over how long. "Visible" is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
So this article does something different. NIDA's Ultimate Moisturizing Cream went through an independent human application test: 21 women, average age 59, applying it daily for four weeks while a clinical lab measured what changed. No filters, no influencer lighting — instruments.
Here's what those four weeks look like, week by week: what you can feel, what reviewers consistently report, and what the lab actually measured at the end.
Days 1–7: The Part You Can Feel
Let's be honest about week one: any decent moisturizer can make skin feel hydrated on day one. That part is easy, and it proves nothing yet.
What's worth noticing in the first week is texture behavior. This formula goes on like a light gel-cream, absorbs fast, and leaves no heavy film — which is why the most repeated first-week observations in reviews are about what it doesn't do: it doesn't sit on top of skin, doesn't feel greasy by noon, and doesn't pill under sunscreen or foundation.
Week one is also when you find out whether your skin tolerates it. The formula is built around skin-calming ingredients like Centella Asiatica — reviewers with sensitive and even hypersensitive skin report no sting and no reactions.
"I’ve used possibly every moisturiser known to man but NIDA is a game changer. Only been using it for 1 week and I noticed the difference in my skin. My face feels so so soft and definitely more even in texture. I like the feel of the NIDA too because it’s not too thick and not too thin in texture. It’s not greasy and just makes your skin feel clean and moisturised."
Days 8–14: When the Reviews Start Saying "Plump"
The second week is where hydration stops being a sensation and starts being a look. Six different forms of Hyaluronic Acid — from full-size molecules that hold water at the surface to hydrolyzed fragments that reach deeper layers — keep pulling moisture in around the clock, and Niacinamide gets to work on the look of tone and texture.
Read enough reviews and the same vocabulary keeps appearing: "soft," "smooth," "glowing," "plump" — and "makeup applies flawlessly." None of those are lab terms. But they're the human-language version of what the lab is about to confirm.
Days 15–28: The Part You Can Measure
This is where the clinical test earns its keep. After four weeks of daily use, the lab measured skin hydration up 47.83% versus baseline — not "feels more hydrated," measured more hydrated. Pore volume, measured on the cheek area where enlarged pores concentrate, was down by as much as 21.88%.
The test also tracked the look of nasolabial wrinkles, skin brightness, texture roughness, and moisture loss over the same four weeks — the full picture of what consistent hydration does to how skin looks and behaves.
The 4-Week Results
Independent human application test — daily use, measured before and after
"Wow, after a month of using this product, the lines around my mouth/nose have reduced and my skin looks better than it has in years. Well worth it"
Why This Works at $13.99
The ingredient list reads like a formulator ignored the marketing budget: Niacinamide, Adenosine, six forms of Hyaluronic Acid, Squalane, Centella Asiatica, Hydrolyzed Collagen, and a stack of probiotic ferments — Lactobacillus, Bifida, Saccharomyces.
The price reads like Korean manufacturing economics: made in a certified Korean facility, sold in a full 100ml size (most prestige creams are 30–50ml), with no department-store markup built in. You're paying for what's in the jar.
Your Own Four Weeks
Twenty-one women gave this cream four measured weeks, and the numbers came back. The only test that matters now is on your own skin — same protocol: once in the morning, once at night, for a month.
At $13.99 with free Prime delivery and Amazon's 30-day return window, the cost of running that experiment is about as low as skincare gets.
Posted by People Mid-Experiment: