Ultra Repair Cream
First Aid Beauty
Product Verdict Card
First Aid Beauty
Ultra Repair Cream
moisturizer
Consumer product research based on available product data, ingredients, pricing, and AI analysis. Not skin guidance.
Glow Score
Review tradeoffs first
Formula
Formula read is mixed; compare value before reading the score as a simple yes/no.
Fit flags
Fit is the main watch item; review the ingredient list and compare similar moisturizer options.
Value
Value is a caution flag; the score needs to justify the $36 price.
Compare this against other moisturizer products before buying — especially if price, texture, or ingredient fit matters for you.
Glow Index summary
AI skincare analysis for First Aid Beauty Ultra Repair Cream
Glow Index analyzed First Aid Beauty Ultra Repair Cream as a moisturizer using a 4-model AI skincare research process. It currently scores 59/100, with the strongest signals coming from ingredient efficacy, formula transparency, safety profile.
Use this page as a product research snapshot: compare the formula/value signals, read the model reasoning, then review the broader moisturizer rankings before deciding whether the product fits your preferences and budget.
Glow Index is a consumer research tool, not medical advice. Scores are based on product information and AI analysis of ingredients, pricing, evidence, and marketing claims. Patch test new products and consult a qualified professional for skin conditions or medical concerns.
Worth It With Caveats
Good formula, but some tradeoffs — check the pros and cons before buying.
Quick Take
Worth it, but read the fine print.
Pros
- Colloidal oatmeal at 0.5% meets the FDA monograph threshold for a recognized skin protectant and earned the National Eczema Association Seal of Acceptance through independent review.
- The barrier-repair base — glycerin, shea butter, squalane, ceramide NP, dimethicone, and allantoin — is genuinely functional and well-assembled for dry skin hydration.
- The whipped texture absorbs quickly without significant greasiness, making it practical for daily face and body use in appropriate skin types.
- 0.5 % colloidal oatmeal plus ceramide NP, glycerin, and shea butter provide clinically supported barrier repair.
Cons
- Eucalyptus globulus leaf oil is a documented contact sensitizer with no moisturizing benefit — its presence in a product marketed for rosacea and sensitive skin is a direct formula contradiction flagged by all four models.
- Clinical efficacy claims (169% hydration increase) derive from a single study of 21 participants, almost certainly brand-commissioned and not peer-reviewed — treat as directional, not definitive.
- Chrysanthemum parthenium (feverfew) extract carries cross-reactivity risk for individuals with ragweed or Asteraceae-family allergies, an underreported concern in product marketing.
- Tub packaging allows repeated finger contact with the full product reservoir, creating hygiene and contamination risk over time.
Budget Alternative
CeraVe Moisturizing Cream by CeraVe — $18
Score Breakdown
How Each AI Scored
AI Consensus
Strong agreement4 AI models independently scored this product, then cross-checked each other’s reasoning. Tap a model to see its take.
FAQ
What does Glow Index measure for First Aid Beauty Ultra Repair Cream?
Glow Index evaluates non-medical skincare research signals: ingredient efficacy, safety profile, value for money, formula transparency, skin compatibility, and sensory usability.
Is this a medical recommendation?
No. Glow Index is not medical advice, not a diagnosis, and not a treatment recommendation. It is a consumer research layer for comparing skincare products and marketing claims.
Why does Glow Index use multiple AI models?
Multiple models reduce single-model bias. Glow Index surfaces consensus and disagreement instead of relying on one AI answer or brand marketing copy.