Compare Products: Mela B3 Serum vs C E Ferulic with 15% L-Ascorbic Acid
Who It's Designed For
- Those with stubborn hyperpigmentation including sunspots, age spots, and post-acne marks
- Users seeking dermatologist-backed, clinically tested brightening products
- People who want an alternative mechanism to vitamin C or hydroquinone
- All skin tones; formulated to work without affecting natural skin tone
- Sensitive skin types who need gentle but effective brightening
- Those who want the research-backed gold standard in vitamin C serums
- Users willing to pay premium pricing for clinical-grade formulation
- People seeking the specific patented CE Ferulic ratio (15%/1%/0.5%)
- Those whose dermatologists recommend medical-grade vitamin C
- Users looking for maximum photoprotection alongside sunscreen
Key Ingredients
Niacinamide (10%), Melasyl (2-Mercaptonicotinoyl Glycine), Sodium Hyaluronate, LHA (Capryloyl Salicylic Acid)
15% L-Ascorbic Acid, 1% Alpha Tocopherol (Vitamin E), 0.5% Ferulic Acid, Sodium Hyaluronate, Panthenol
Product Composition
28% similarity (10 ingredients in common)
Only in La Roche Posay (22)▾
Only in SkinCeuticals (4)▾
User Feedback Patterns
Users frequently report fading of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation from acne. Often noted as more effective than previous vitamin C serums.
Despite fragrance, many sensitive skin users report no irritation. Users with rosacea have noted tolerance.
Users report seeing changes over weeks to months. Not overnight results, but consistent improvement with regular use.
Lightweight serum absorbs quickly without greasiness. Layers well under sunscreen and makeup.
Some users with stubborn melasma or very dark spots report only modest improvement. Works better on newer or less severe pigmentation.
The most consistent praise across all platforms. Users report a noticeable glow, brighter skin, and reduced dullness within 2-3 weeks of daily morning use.
The metallic, acidic smell (commonly described as 'hot dog water') is mentioned in nearly every review. Most users tolerate it because of results; some find it unbearable.
Paying $182 for a serum that darkens within weeks is the primary complaint. Some users report receiving already-oxidized bottles from retailers.
Many users buy this specifically because their dermatologist recommended it. The medical-grade positioning provides confidence that cheaper alternatives may not.