Ceramides

← Ingredient Library
Barrier Repair Active

Ceramides

INCICeramide NP, Ceramide AP, Ceramide EOP, Ceramide NS, Ceramide AS, Phytosphingosine, Sphingolipids

Half of your skin barrier is made of these. When they run low, your skin gets tight, red, and sensitive. Topical ceramides put back exactly what is missing. The ingredient that built CeraVe and the entire barrier repair category.

What you need to know

🧱

What it is

A family of lipid molecules that make up about 50% of the stratum corneum (your outermost skin layer). Cosmetic ceramides are synthesised or fermented to match the structure of the ceramides your own skin produces.

⚑

What it does

Slots into the lipid matrix between skin cells. Replaces ceramides lost to age, climate, over cleansing, or compromised barrier. Reduces transepidermal water loss. The skin feels less tight, looks less red, recovers faster from any aggravation.

βœ“

Best for

Dry skin, mature skin, sensitised skin, atopic dermatitis, post procedure skin, anyone using actives like retinol or AHAs, anyone living in air conditioning. Most people benefit from ceramides somewhere in their routine.

⏱️

Time to results

Comfort and reduced tightness: within hours of application. Visible barrier repair (less redness, less flaking): one to two weeks. Sustained TEWL improvement: four to eight weeks of consistent use.

How it actually works

The stratum corneum is a brick and mortar structure. Skin cells are the bricks. Lipids are the mortar. Ceramides are the largest single category of that mortar.

πŸ”¬

The 3:1:1 ratio

Healthy skin barrier lipids are about 50% ceramides, 25% cholesterol, 25% free fatty acids. The exact ratio matters. Replacing only ceramides without cholesterol and free fatty acids actually slows barrier recovery (Elias 1990 and subsequent work).

πŸ“‰

Why we lose them

Ceramide content drops with age, with low humidity exposure, with surfactant heavy cleansing, with topical retinoids, and in conditions like atopic dermatitis or psoriasis. Less ceramide means more TEWL, which means drier, more reactive skin.

🧬

Ceramide naming

Older numeric naming (Ceramide 1, 2, 3) was replaced by the Bracco / Motta system (EOS, NS, NP, AS, AP, EOP). The letters describe the chemistry of the fatty acid and sphingosine portions. For consumers the practical answer is that a formula with multiple ceramide types is more representative of skin's natural mix than a single type alone.

πŸ’§

Multilamellar delivery

Ceramides absorb best when delivered in a lamellar structure (layers that mimic the skin barrier itself). This is the technology behind the MVE in CeraVe products and similar lamellar emulsions. The structure of the delivery matters as much as the dose.

What the clinical data shows

Ceramides are one of the most clinically validated cosmetic ingredients, with decades of dermatology research particularly in atopic dermatitis and aged skin.

TEWL
↓

Significant reduction in transepidermal water loss in 4 to 12 week ceramide cream studies (Chamlin 2002 and others)

Atopic dermatitis
↓

Reduced flare frequency and steroid use in pediatric and adult ceramide containing emollient trials

Aged skin
↑

Improved hydration and reduced scaling in mature skin studies (Imokawa 2009)

Compatibility
Universal

Works with every other active in skincare. No known incompatibilities.

Why this matters Ceramides do not promise transformation. They promise replacement. They put back what your skin barrier was supposed to have. The visible effect is a softer, calmer, less reactive skin that handles the rest of your routine better. Foundational, not flashy.
Cheap label, real ingredient The barrier repair category is one of the few in skincare where mass market drugstore products (CeraVe, La Roche Posay Toleriane, Cetaphil) often outperform luxury brand serums at twenty times the price. The active is well understood, the delivery technology is well established, and the formulation cost is not prohibitive. Pay attention to ceramide content and lamellar delivery, not brand prestige.

Ceramides vs the alternatives

HA pulls water in. Ceramides keep it in. Different layers of the hydration story. Use HA on damp skin, then ceramide cream to seal. They are almost always paired in modern formulas.

Squalane is a single lightweight oil. Ceramides are the structural lipids of the barrier. They are not competing. A well formulated cream often contains both: ceramides for structure, squalane for emollient feel.

Ceramides patch the barrier from the lipid side. Centella supports the cells that build the barrier. Stack them for both the immediate seal and the slow rebuild. Standard pairing in K beauty barrier creams.

Panthenol is a small molecule humectant with mild anti inflammatory action. Ceramides are structural lipids. They share routine slots but do different jobs. Pairing is common.

vs Petrolatum

Petrolatum is the strongest occlusive on the market (reduces TEWL by up to 99%). Ceramides match the skin's own chemistry but reduce TEWL less. For severe barrier damage, petrolatum gives faster surface protection. For long term barrier health, ceramides are the better daily choice.

Side effects and how to use

Side effect profile Among the safest cosmetic actives. Ceramides are endogenous to the skin so allergy is extremely rare. Suitable for the most sensitive skin types and for use in atopic dermatitis. Compatible with retinoids, AHAs, BHAs, vitamin C, niacinamide, and every other active.
Look for multiple ceramide types A formula listing one ceramide is technically using the active. A formula listing three or four ceramide types (NP, AP, EOP, NS) more accurately mirrors the natural barrier lipid mix. Bonus points if cholesterol and free fatty acids are also in the formula.
How to use Twice daily. Layer ceramide cream over hydrating toners and serums to seal them in. On retinol nights, follow the retinoid with a ceramide rich moisturiser to buffer the irritation. Particularly useful during travel, winter, or any period of barrier compromise.

Products with ceramides

Ceramides are part of the barrier repair complex in our Hydra Radiance Rice Milk Toner. Layer the toner under a moisturiser for full barrier work and pair with the cleanse, lift and cool steps.

Pair with

Common questions

Why does my skin need topical ceramides if it makes its own?

Ceramide production drops with age, with cumulative sun exposure, with frequent cleansing, with topical retinoids, and in any condition that disrupts the barrier. Topical ceramides supplement what your skin is not producing fast enough to keep up with demand.

Are all ceramide types interchangeable?

Functionally similar but not identical. Healthy skin contains multiple ceramide subtypes in specific ratios. A formula with three or four ceramide types (NP, AP, EOP, NS for example) more accurately replaces what is missing than a formula with one. Look in the INCI.

Will ceramides clog my pores?

No. Ceramides are not comedogenic. They are the same lipids your own skin makes. Some heavy ceramide containing moisturisers may not suit oily skin, but the ceramides themselves are not the problem. Lighter ceramide lotions and serums work for all skin types.

Can I use ceramides with retinol?

Yes, ideally you should. Topical retinoids reduce barrier function as part of their mechanism. Ceramides counter that effect without blocking the retinoid action. Standard pairing: retinoid first, then ceramide rich moisturiser on top.

How long until my skin barrier is repaired?

Comfort: hours. Visible calming: days to two weeks. Measurable TEWL improvement: four to eight weeks. Severe barrier damage from over exfoliation or aggressive treatment can take three to six months of consistent barrier focused routine to fully recover.

Are mass market ceramide products really as good as expensive ones?

For barrier repair specifically, often yes. The active and the delivery technology are well established. Drugstore ceramide creams from CeraVe, La Roche Posay, or Cetaphil frequently outperform luxury serums at twenty times the price. Pay attention to formulation, not brand.

The evidence