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The Glow

The Glow Standard · Skincare · Moisturiser

The moisturisers we actually finish.

Most face creams sit. These four sink in, behave under SPF, and last the bottle. One barrier-led, one peptide-led, two in between.

Augustinus Bader The Rich Cream trio on a neutral surface

The quick answer

If you only buy one.

Buy Augustinus Bader The Rich Cream at AU$330. It scored 9.6 on the Glow Standard, and it is the only luxury moisturiser our editors have re-bought at full price without an excuse. Dry, mature, post-procedure or simply tired skin — this is the cream that holds. If the spend isn’t the right one this month, Frasé Skin Daily Moisturiser at AU$45 is the closest barrier-and-peptide finish we’ve found under fifty dollars, and it is the answer for combination skin that wants comfort without slip.

Average Glow Score across 4 moisturisers tested: 9.08 / 10

Disclosure. Frasé Skin is part of the same independent publishing network as The Glow. We rank it here because the panel ranked it; not because we own it. See the network and our disclosures policy.

The ranking

Four moisturisers worth shelf space.

The moisturiser shelf in Australia is split between barrier-led brands and peptide-led brands. The four below do both well enough to keep buying. Order is intentional. We won’t pretend a $45 jar is the same as a $330 one — they aren’t — but each is the right answer for a different skin and a different week.

Augustinus Bader The Rich Cream jar on linen

Augustinus Bader

The Rich Cream

An occlusive-but-breathable cream with the TFC8 peptide complex. Drier and more mature skins get the most out of it: visible plumping by week two, less morning tightness, makeup sits cleaner. It is expensive, and we’re going to be the page that admits it earns the price.

Glow Score 9.6AU$330 · 50mlDry · mature · post-procedure

Buy at Mecca
Frasé Skin Daily Moisturiser flatlay with the men's kit

Frasé Skin

Daily Moisturiser

A peptide and ceramide daily that wears like a primer and feels like a comfort cream. Quietly the best value in the ranking: combination and oilier skins finish it before realising what it’s done. Owner-conflict flagged above; the score stands.

Glow Score 9.2AU$45 · 50mlCombination · normal · oily

Buy at Frasé Skin
Tatcha The Dewy Skin Cream jar with green packaging

Tatcha

The Dewy Skin Cream

The cream people mean when they say they want “glass skin.” A genuinely dewy bouncing finish from squalane and Japanese purple rice ferment. Sits well under makeup if your base isn’t matte, less well if it is. Best on dehydrated normal skin.

Glow Score 8.9AU$118 · 50mlDehydrated · normal · dry-combo

Buy at Mecca
Dr.Jart+ Ceramidin Cream yellow cubes campaign image

Dr.Jart+

Ceramidin Cream

A K-beauty barrier cream that does the job CeraVe does for normal-to-dry, but with a sleeker finish and a price you don’t mind reapplying. Five ceramides, panthenol, and a quietly addictive texture. The cold-snap and post-flight pick across the panel.

Glow Score 8.6AU$76 · 50mlCompromised · dry · sensitised

Buy at Sephora

How we tested

Six weeks. Six panellists. One jar.

The rule, as with every Glow Standard ranking: a moisturiser earns its spot only if every panellist kept reaching for it past week three. We trial-stocked seventeen creams across price tiers, from the K-beauty barrier shelf to the prestige peptide drawer. Each panellist used the candidate AM and PM for a fortnight before scoring on barrier feel one hour after application, behaviour under mineral SPF and base makeup, and the question we ask of every product — would you walk into a Mecca and pay for the refill yourself.

The panel spans Fitzpatrick II through V, weighted slightly toward combination and dehydrated normal skin because that’s the demographic most often paralysed by the moisturiser shelf. One panellist has post-procedure compromised skin (mid-strength laser, four weeks out) and one has rosacea-prone reactivity. We tested in May — cool, mostly dry — in inner Melbourne. Climate matters; we’d rather flag it than pretend it doesn’t.

Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Agresta led the read-out. Four creams cleared the bar in distinct ways — one luxury, one budget, one dewy, one barrier — which is why we kept all four rather than collapsing to a single winner. The other thirteen didn’t.

Field note

The moisturiser drawer, briefly.

The moisturiser market in Australia has split clean down the middle. On one side, the barrier-led brands — CeraVe, La Roche-Posay, Dr.Jart+, the Cetaphil reformulations — doing ceramide and panthenol work at the chemist tier. On the other, the peptide-led prestige brands — Augustinus Bader, U Beauty, Dr. Barbara Sturm — charging two-to-three hundred dollars for the same active hours but with a noticeably better skin finish on mature skin. Both halves are mostly honest. The traps are the brands trying to be on both sides at once.

If you’re standing in front of the shelf: barrier-first if your skin is reacting, peptide-first if it’s settled and you want it to look like you slept. Don’t buy a moisturiser hoping it will fix a serum’s problem — that’s upstream. And the bottle size matters more than the brand: a $45 jar finished in eight weeks is doing more work than a $200 jar abandoned on the shelf in twelve.

More: the cleanser ranking · the serum ranking · the SPF ranking · the skincare hub · the Glow 100 · The Glow Standard.