The beauty world sends some products straight to the skin care graveyard. They’re everywhere for six months, dominate your TikTok feed, then quietly disappear into the same drawer as jade rollers, sheet masks and that LED gadget you swore you’d use every night.
Then there are the icons. (Looking at you Nars Orgasm Blush).
The products that beauty editors recommend without thinking, dermatologists always seem to have on hand, and French women casually toss into their pharmacy baskets while the rest of us spend half our holiday trying to decipher labels we can’t read.
Avene Cicalfate+ belongs firmly in the second camp.
Celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, the restorative cream has achieved something almost unheard of in beauty. It has outlasted trends, survived countless ingredient crazes and somehow feels even more relevant today than it did when it first landed on French pharmacy shelves.
That’s partly thanks to the skin care world’s latest obsession: repairing, not punishing, your skin barrier.
And partly thanks to a growing list of celebrity devotees.
Sofia Richie Grainge famously called Cicalfate+ her “holy grail” for creating that impossibly fresh, expensive-looking glow, revealing that she smooths it on before makeup because it makes everything layered on top look better. Hailey Bieber has helped turn the cream into a cult favourite, embracing the skin-first approach behind the now-iconic glazed, healthy complexion look. Lily Collins is another fan, proving that sometimes the best beauty secret isn’t a luxury cream with a four-figure waitlist – it’s the humble tube sitting in a French pharmacy.
It’s exactly the kind of recommendation beauty lovers trust. Not because it went viral overnight, but because beauty insiders have been quietly passing it around for decades.
That’s the thing about French pharmacy skin care. It has never really cared about chasing trends.
Long before “skin cycling”, “glass skin” and “barrier repair” entered the beauty lexicon, French pharmacy brands prioritised something far less glamorous but infinitely more important: keeping skin calm, comfortable and healthy.
Avene has built its reputation on exactly that philosophy. Powered by its famous Thermal Spring Water and developed for sensitive skin, the brand has become one of those rare heritage names that feels equally at home in a dermatologist’s clinic and a beauty editor’s skin care shelf.
Cicalfate+ might just be its greatest success story.
Avene created the cream to rescue compromised and irritated skin. And, beauty lovers now reach for it cream whenever they’ve gone too hard on exfoliating acids, tried a new treatment or when their skin simply says “enough.”
It’s no coincidence that it’s having another big moment now.
After years of chasing stronger actives and longer skin care routines, beauty is entering its healing era. The goal isn’t to strip your skin into submission – it’s to support it. Barrier repair has become less of a niche concern and more of a skin care non-negotiable.
That’s exactly where Cicalfate+ shines.
The formula combines Avene Thermal Spring Water with Copper-Zinc Sulphate and the brand’s postbiotic active ingredient, C+-Restore, to help soothe irritation while supporting the skin’s natural repair process. Clinical studies show Cicalfate+ helps support skin barrier repair up to four times faster than untreated skin, making it the ultimate skin SOS when your complexion decides to throw a tantrum.
Its versatility has only added to its cult following. Suitable for babies, children and adults, it’s become one of those rare bathroom-cabinet staples that everyone in the family somehow ends up borrowing.
To celebrate 25 years of skin-saving credentials, Avene is adding a new member to the family: the Cicalfate+ Repair Lip Balm.
Launching just in time for winter, the balm repairs, protects, soothes and hydrates dry, cracked lips, delivering up to 24 hours of hydration and visibly repaired lips within 48 hours. Like the original cream, it’s designed for the whole family and built around the same philosophy of supporting skin rather than overwhelming it.
In an industry obsessed with what’s next, there’s something undeniably “Hailey Bieber” cool about a product that’s spent much of its 25 years in the spotlight without a reel.
Because while beauty trends come and go, cult classics don’t become cult classics by accident. They earn it.