Hot News
MIT disavows doctoral student paper on AI’s productivity benefits
Your daily MLB trivia game, Sunday edition
Celebrate August with Smart – MAXPRO Fitness
Medina Eisa and Selemon Barega win Great Manchester Run titles
Colin Jost and Scarlett Johansson Team Up for SNL Finale Revenge
Breaking News and USA Updates with USAUpdate24
  • Home
  • Breaking
  • USA
  • Business
    • CEO
    • Founder
    • Entrepreneur
    • Journalist
    • Realtor
  • Health
    • Doctor
    • Plastic surgeon
    • Beauty cosmetics
  • Crypto
    • Trading
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Sports
    • Athlete
    • Coach
    • Fitness trainer
  • Technology
Reading: Other Brands Can Now Legally Try to Dupe SkinCeuticals’ $182 Vitamin C Serum
  • bitcoinBitcoin(BTC)$105,846.832.44%
  • ethereumEthereum(ETH)$2,567.973.24%
  • tetherTether(USDT)$1.000.03%
  • rippleXRP(XRP)$2.433.50%
  • binancecoinBinance Coin(BNB)$654.231.82%
  • solanaSolana(SOL)$175.485.11%
  • usd-coinUSDC(USDC)$1.00-0.02%
  • dogecoinDogecoin(DOGE)$0.2349228.75%
  • cardanoCardano(ADA)$0.773.20%
  • staked-etherLido Staked Ether(STETH)$2,563.593.79%
Breaking News and USA Updates with USAUpdate24Breaking News and USA Updates with USAUpdate24
  • Home
  • Breaking
  • USA
  • Business
  • Health
  • Crypto
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
Search
  • Home
  • Breaking
  • USA
  • Business
    • CEO
    • Founder
    • Entrepreneur
    • Journalist
    • Realtor
  • Health
    • Doctor
    • Plastic surgeon
    • Beauty cosmetics
  • Crypto
    • Trading
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Sports
    • Athlete
    • Coach
    • Fitness trainer
  • Technology
Follow US
©2025 USA Update24. All Rights Reserved.
Home » Blog » Other Brands Can Now Legally Try to Dupe SkinCeuticals’ $182 Vitamin C Serum
Beauty cosmetics

Other Brands Can Now Legally Try to Dupe SkinCeuticals’ $182 Vitamin C Serum

Jessica Lee
Jessica Lee
Published April 7, 2025
Share

About 15 years ago, I was making $16 an hour selling designer denim to rich housewives at an upscale boutique. Though it was more expensive than I could afford at the time, I scraped together the cash to buy a three-figure bottle of SkinCeuticals C E Ferulic serum. I was obsessed with beauty magazines—including this very publication—and blogs, all of which said it was the gold-standard vitamin C formula. So I figured it must be worth the splurge to get rid of my post-acne marks.

And it was. And it still is! Twenty years after its launch, C E Ferulic is an icon in the skin-care world (we don’t use the i-word lightly). It’s won six Allure awards between Best of Beauty and Reader’s Choice and sits on the top shelves of beauty editors, celebrities, and skin-care enthusiasts everywhere. The serum is a beyond-potent combination of 15 percent vitamin C, one percent vitamin E, and 0.5 percent ferulic acid formulated to brighten skin, fade dark spots and hyperpigmentation, and target fine lines and wrinkles. It’s also… not cheap. A 30-milliliter bottle currently goes for $182. But C E Ferulic’s 20-year patent, which protected that hyper-effective ingredient blend from being duped, has just expired, which means other brands can now attempt to make their own versions, likely at lower price points.

Though vitamin C serums are a dime a dozen these days, they haven’t been around all that long. The late Sheldon Pinnell, MD was a dermatology professor at Duke University who first started working with vitamin C in the 1980s. He joined forces with Cellex-C to launch the first vitamin-C serum in 1990, before working with SkinCeuticals to create their C E Ferulic serum in 2005. In 2007, he spoke to Allure about his fascination with vitamin C and its impact on the skin. “I was interested in how it could stimulate collagen synthesis,” he said. “But we found that what it was really good for was protecting against sunlight.”

C E Ferulic isn’t your run-of-the-mill vitamin C treatment, and that’s what makes it so beloved. (And so effective. And so expensive.) Its magic is in that exact ratio of vitamin C to vitamin E to ferulic acid. According to Kelly Dobos, a cosmetic chemist and adjunct professor of cosmetic science at the University of Cincinnati, ferulic acid plays a very important role in this formula. It scavenges free radicals, helps the formula maintain its acidic pH—important for efficiency—and absorbs ultraviolet light that would otherwise cause destabilization.

Previous Article Top Trump official’s crypto ties raise red flags as the administration touts digital assets
Next Article 8 Overnight Masks for Dewier Skin Before Your Alarm Goes Off
Popular News
Rahul Yadav Indian Entrepreneur Expands Business to South Africa
Bryan Kohberger’s Amazon Ka-Bar records ‘catastrophic’ for defense, experts say
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu blasts ‘presidents who think they are kings’
Fox News Digital’s News Quiz: March 21, 2025
Mysterious radio pulses from the Milky Way ‘are unlike anything we knew before’
Supernovas may have played a role in two of Earth’s largest mass extinctions, study suggests
  • USA
  • Entertainment
  • Market
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Business
  • CEO
  • Founder
  • Entrepreneur
  • Journalist
  • Crypto
  • Trading
  • Health
  • Doctor
  • Plastic Surgeon
  • Beauty Cosmetics
  • Sports
  • Athlete
  • Coach
  • Fitness Trainer
© 2017-2025 USA update24. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?