These two serums take different paths to a similar destination. Both formulas include solid hydrating ingredients, and the overall scores reflect that — the gap here is genuinely slim.
Active Ingredient Strength is another area of separation. Augustinus Bader The Vitamin C Serum scores 6.7 here versus 4.2 for StriVectin Hydration Multiplier Hyaluronic Acid Face Serum with Ceramides. That difference comes down to how each formula is built — the ingredient list tells the story.
Augustinus Bader The Vitamin C Serum brings Ascorbyl Glucoside, Niacinamide, and Tocopheryl Acetate as actives, while striVectin Hydration Multiplier Hyaluronic Acid Face Serum with Ceramides relies on Bisabolol, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Extract, and Allantoin. Both approaches have merit, but the positioning and supporting ingredients make the difference.
At luxury pricing with a score of 8.7, Augustinus Bader The Vitamin C Serum is a decent pick. StriVectin Hydration Multiplier Hyaluronic Acid Face Serum with Ceramides sits at the premium level with a 8.7 score — the extra cost doesn't translate to better scores here.