Beauty

The Best Peptide Serums and Creams That Are Actually Worth the Money in 2022

Plus why derms love ’em so much.
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Signaling peptides

By far the most commonly used cosmetic peptides, products containing these ingredients claim to maximize the amount of collagen in your skin. “Signaling peptides have different ways of [doing this],” Noelani González, MD, director of cosmetic dermatology at Mount Sinai West, tells SELF. “Procollagen segments can actually stimulate collagen production, but they can also signal skin [cells] that enough collagen has been broken down,” thus preventing your body from breaking down any more.

Whether they’re actually helping make more collagen or just helping the skin hold onto what you’ve got, it’s easy to see why signaling peptides are everywhere in skin care right now. There are a lot of them too. Here are just a few you might see on a label:

  • Carnosine and N-acetylcarnosine
  • Trifluoroacetyl tripeptide-2
  • Most palmitoyl tripeptides and palmitoyl hexapeptides
  • Most tetrapeptides, including tetrapeptide-21 and tetrapeptide TKEK
  • Most hexapeptides, including hexapeptide-11 and hexapeptide-14
Carrier peptides

These are probably the second most popular skin-care peptides. “Carrier peptides hook up to another ingredient to facilitate its delivery [to skin cells],” Dr. González explains. “The most common ingredient is copper, which helps with wound healing.” Most products simply list copper peptides on the ingredients, but some products also use manganese carrier peptides in the form of manganese tripeptide-1.

Neurotransmitter inhibitor peptides

Neurotransmitter inhibitors, which are less common than signaling and carrier peptides, may decrease the appearance of fine lines by blocking the release of acetylcholine—a neurotransmitter heavily involved in muscle contractions. Yes, these peptides are supposed to literally relax your facial muscles. These are the main peptides in this class:

  • Acetylhexapeptide-3
  • Pentapeptides, including pentapeptide-3 and pentapeptide-18
  • Tripeptide-3
Enzyme inhibitor peptides

Like neurotransmitter inhibitors, enzyme inhibitors interfere with the activity of chemicals involved in a specific aging-related process. In this case, they’re inhibiting enzymes that mediate the breakdown of collagen and other skin proteins. In theory, this helps stave off collagen loss. The most common types are soybean peptides, silk fibroin peptides, and rice peptides.

Structural or keratin peptides

Structural peptides are unique in that they specifically target dehydration and dryness. They’re usually derived from keratin—a protein that gives hair and nails their structure, among other things—and seem to work by improving skin barrier function, allowing it to retain more water and give the skin a plumper look. If you see these at all, they’ll likely be listed as keratin peptides or maybe wool lipids, since sheep’s wool is the most common source of keratin in this case.

Research claims about peptide benefits in skin-care products

Peptides have been studied for so long in so many different medical contexts that we actually know a good deal about how peptides work—just not always in the way you’d want. Most of the experimental data we have on peptides come from in vitro experiments, like cell cultures looking at the expression of certain proteins or studies done on artificial silicone skin. Often these studies don’t directly apply to cosmetics or skin-care products but are taken as evidence anyway.

For example, copper peptides have in fact been shown to improve wound healing, which is partially why people started putting them in cosmetics. But, as Dr. González explains, those results may not transfer to skin-care benefits: “Wounded and healthy skin have different topographies, so we don’t know if [copper peptides] work the same on healthy skin,” she says. Several studies ended up finding that cosmetics containing copper peptides do promote smoother, healthier skin, but it’s still not clear if the same wound-healing mechanism is responsible for those results.

There are some peer-reviewed studies that test the efficacy of peptide products on actual human skin, and the results suggest that peptides seem to actually work. However, these aren’t the huge, double-blind clinical studies we’d all love to see—and they’re usually carried out by skin-care and pharmaceutical companies. According to Dr. González, this in itself isn’t automatically concerning: “Skin-care companies do good studies sometimes,” she says, but the studies still aren’t usually large enough to draw any huge conclusions. (The largest study we encountered was this 93-person experiment from 2005. Most had 15 to 40 participants.)

Claims around peptide serums are not FDA-regulated

From a consumer perspective, the most important thing to understand about peptides is that as with most skin-care products, they’re “cosmeceuticals.” This is not an FDA-regulated classification; it’s a marketing term that implies a cosmetic product has “medicinal or drug-like qualities.” (And those qualities may be used to justify higher prices.) But cosmeceuticals are not drugs—at least, not according to the FDA.

As long as they don’t claim to cure a disease or alter the structure of your skin, peptides aren’t subject to the same FDA regulations as, for example, retinoids, salicylic acid, or benzoyl peroxide. This also means that peptides haven’t been studied as extensively as drugs, SELF explained previously, so we don’t know as much about how they work.

Usually when people hear “cosmetic regulations,” they immediately picture, like, an eyeshadow palette crammed with illegal or irritating ingredients. But contamination isn’t typically the issue with cosmeceuticals. Instead the problem is how they’re labeled. When you buy a product that contains an actual drug, the label must list its concentration and the specific form used in the product. The same is not true of cosmetics—and therefore cosmeceuticals—no matter how scientific the product or its claims sound. There’s generally no way to know the concentration of peptides in a moisturizer, and in some cases it might not even be obvious which ones are in there.

Still, dermatologists love ’em.

Given the amount of favorable evidence out there, it’s not surprising that experts were pretty pro-peptides. “Having reviewed the literature, and also anecdotally in my own practice, I think they do promote thicker skin,” says Dr. Stevenson, who uses a peptide product in her routine. But she recognizes that peptide products are expensive and might not be as splurge-worthy as other options that definitely work: “Anyone who’s putting down a reasonable amount of money on [antiaging skin care] should prioritize lasers and neurotoxins (a.k.a. Botox)—and a good relationship with a dermatologist.”

Peptides vs Retinol

Okay, so peptide creams can’t match the wrinkle-busting power of Botox and lasers. But what about retinoids, the other gold standard in collagen regeneration?

Here’s where it gets fuzzy. Although they seem to work in similar ways, we know way less about peptides than we do about retinoids, and there aren’t many studies comparing them directly. (One small study found copper peptides to be comparable to tretinoin.) Based on their experiences with patients, Dr. Stevenson and Dr. González agree that peptides seem to be less irritating than retinoids, which may make them a good antiaging choice for people with sensitive skin. But if you already use and get antiaging benefits from a retinoid, you don’t necessarily need to try peptides.

If you want, though, you can use them at the same time. “There’s no issue using peptides and retinoids simultaneously,” Dr. Stevenson says. “Just be sure to introduce one product at a time: Use one for two weeks on its own, then introduce the other.”

Overall, peptides are a surprisingly evidence-supported ingredient that could make a difference in your skin—they just shouldn’t be your only strategy for fighting the signs of aging. “Retinoids, AHAs, and sunscreen should be the bulk of your skin-care go-to's because they’ve been thoroughly tested and used for years. We know they work.” Dr. González says. “But peptides are great little extras.”

The best peptide serums and creams

If you’re ready to take the plunge on a peptide serum or cream, check out these products. These are all recommended by the experts we spoke to or meet their criteria for a peptide skin-care product worth trying, meaning it lists the actual peptides in the product and has them fairly high up in the ingredients list.

All products are independently selected by our editors. If you buy something, we may earn an affiliate commission.