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A Cult French Pharmacy Brand Has Finally Landed in Australia

For a brand founded in 1931 by dermatologist Dr Prosper Haller, Vichy Laboratoires has always occupied an interesting space in beauty culture. It sits at the intersection of pharmacy and ritual, where prescriptions meet moisturisers, and where skin care actively navigates an ongoing negotiation with skin health itself.

And now, after nearly a century of quietly shaping the dermo-cosmetic category from its birthplace in central France, Vichy is making its long-awaited debut in Australia in April 2026. For a brand so deeply embedded in European pharmacy culture, this moment marks less of a launch and more of an unveiling, bringing its science, its heritage, and its distinctly clinical approach to beauty to Australian shelves for the first time

Born in the spa town of Vichy, France, the brand has spent 95 years refining a philosophy that sits somewhere between dermatology and ritual. Its foundation is the now-iconic Vichy volcanic water, naturally enriched over millions of years with 15 essential minerals. More than a signature ingredient, it is the conceptual anchor of the brand – a reminder that skin health begins not with trends, but with biology. This water rises from deep within the French volcanic region and powers formulas that reinforce the skin barrier, support resilience, and deliver what the brand calls “integrative skin care”, uniting internal health, environmental stressors and external care as one.

Globally recommended by more than 80,000 dermatologists, Vichy has long positioned itself in the rare space where science-led credibility meets everyday usability. It is skin care designed not just for aesthetics, but for function – with formulations built to respond to the realities of modern skin: pollution, hormonal shifts, UV exposure, fatigue, and age-related collagen loss. In Australia, where consumers are increasingly fluent in ingredient literacy and clinical claims, the timing feels particularly aligned.

Leading Vichy’s Australian introduction is the Liftactiv Collagen Specialist 16 range, the brand’s most advanced anti-ageing innovation to date. The range is the result of more than 25 years of research into collagen, reimagined through what Vichy calls Co-Bonding Technology – a formulation approach designed to support the skin’s structural integrity at multiple levels.

Together, the collection forms a complete routine built around continuity rather than quick fixes.

In addition to the collagen-focused range, Vichy will also introduce its broader skin care portfolio to Australian shelves, including the Liftactiv Hyaluronic and Vitamin C lines, B3 treatments, and targeted serums, alongside its well-known body care and anti-perspirant products formulated for sensitive skin.

“We’ve seen the success of Dercos haircare in Australia since 2023, which clearly demonstrated strong demand for science-led, dermatologist-backed solutions,” says Penelope Thornett, General Manager of L’Oréal Dermatological Beauty ANZ. “Australian consumers are increasingly informed and are seeking products that not only feel indulgent, but deliver proven, visible results. Vichy Laboratoires brings exactly that.”

The brand’s dermatological ethos reflects that intersection of clinical efficacy and sensory experience. As Dr Leona Yip, expert dermatologist at Skin Partners, explains, skin health never exists in isolation. “Skin reflects a combination of internal factors like hormones and ageing, alongside external influences such as sun exposure, environment and lifestyle,” she says. “From our 40s onwards, collagen production naturally declines – but with the right ingredients, we can support skin function to achieve meaningful, visible improvements over time.”

It is this philosophy that underpins Vichy’s positioning: skin care as long-term maintenance rather than correction, with collagen support sitting at the centre of that approach.

Marie-Antoinette Issa: Marie-Antoinette Issa is the Beauty & Lifestyle Editor for The Carousel, Women Love Tech and Women Love Travel. She has worked across news and women's lifestyle magazines and websites including Cosmopolitan, Cleo, Madison, Concrete Playground, The Urban List and Daily Mail, I Quit Sugar and Huffington Post.
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