These two moisturisers 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. Dr. Althea Vitamin C Boosting Serum scores 6.8 here versus 4.1 for Estée Lauder Resilience Multi-Effect Tri-Peptide Face and Neck Creme. That difference comes down to how each formula is built — the ingredient list tells the story.
Estée Lauder Resilience Multi-Effect Tri-Peptide Face and Neck Creme brings Cucumis Melo Fruit Extract, Laminaria Digitata Extract, and Acetyl Hexapeptide-8 as actives, while dr. Althea Vitamin C Boosting Serum relies on Niacinamide, Dipotassium Glycyrrhizate, and Adenosine. Both approaches have merit, but the positioning and supporting ingredients make the difference.
Estée Lauder Resilience Multi-Effect Tri-Peptide Face and Neck Creme comes in at luxury pricing with a 8.2 score, which is solid value at that tier.