medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum vs OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide
medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum scores 8.6/9.8 and OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide scores 8.8/9.8 — a near-tie where your skin type decides the winner.
Head to head

Deep Vita A Retinol Serum

Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide
Score comparison
These two are neck and neck — just 0.2 points apart.
Scores last verified: July 2026
Attribute battle
Hydration Efficacy
TIEIrritation Risk
TIEActive Ingredient Strength
OLEHENRIKSEN WINSIngredient Transparency
medicube WINSFormulation Safety
TIEIngredient face-off
21% overlapOnly in medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum
39 unique
Shared ingredients
14 in common
Only in OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide
54 unique
Why these two are neck and neck
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.
Ingredient Transparency is another area of separation. medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum scores 8.8 here versus 8.5 for OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide. That difference comes down to how each formula is built — the ingredient list tells the story.
OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide brings Niacinamide, Acetyl Hexapeptide-1, and Acetyl Hexapeptide-8 as actives, while medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum relies on Niacinamide, Allantoin, and Dipotassium Glycyrrhizate. Both approaches have merit, but the positioning and supporting ingredients make the difference.
Best for your skin type
medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum is better if you have
- Sensitive skin — the low-irritation formula keeps things gentle
- Dry or dehydrated skin that craves moisture, thanks to Dipropylene Glycol
- Anyone who prefers clean, well-vetted formulations
OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide is better if you have
- Sensitive skin — the low-irritation formula keeps things gentle
- Dry or dehydrated skin that craves moisture, thanks to Propanediol
- Targeting specific concerns like aging or uneven tone — Niacinamide does the heavy lifting
Our verdict
It's a close call — both products score within 0.3 points of each other. Your choice depends on your specific skin concerns.


Frequently asked questions
Which is better: medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum or OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide?
Based on ingredient analysis, OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide scores higher overall. See the full score breakdown above for details on each attribute.
Do medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum and OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide share ingredients?
Yes, they share common ingredients. Check the ingredient face-off section above for a detailed comparison.
What's the main difference between medicube Deep Vita A Retinol Serum and OLEHENRIKSEN Strength Peptide Barrier Boost Moisturizer with Hyaluronic Acid and Niacinamide?
The key differences are in their active ingredients and formulation approach. Check the attribute battle above for a detailed breakdown.