We use essential cookies (authentication, your saved goals/stack) by default. With your permission we'll also enable privacy-respecting analytics (Vercel Web Analytics, anonymous load-time metrics) and error-replay diagnostics (Sentry — DOM snapshots only when an error fires) so we can fix bugs faster. Learn more about cookies
Evidence-based supplements similar to Matrixyl, ranked by shared goals and clinical evidence. Compare any of them head-to-head below.
Daily broad-spectrum sunscreen — the single most evidence-based anti-aging skincare step there is, and the one most 'anti-aging' actives are really just trying to compensate for. The honest framing: this is the only topical on this list backed by a proper randomized controlled trial for skin aging itself. In the landmark Hughes 2013 trial (n=903), people randomized to daily sunscreen showed 24% less photoaging over 4.5 years — and no detectable increase in skin aging at all — while the mechanism (UV → matrix-metalloproteinase activation → collagen breakdown) is textbook. The same trial cohort also had less skin cancer. The honest caveats: the benefit is overwhelmingly prevention, not reversal of existing damage; real-world results depend entirely on applying enough and reapplying; and chemical (organic) UV filters are systemically absorbed above an FDA testing threshold (clinical significance unknown — mineral zinc-oxide/titanium-dioxide filters sidestep this). If you do one thing for your skin, it's this.
Topical vitamin C — a leave-on antioxidant skincare active applied to the skin, NOT (in this context) an oral vitamin C supplement. As L-ascorbic acid or a stabilized derivative, it has a strong rationale: vitamin C is an essential cofactor for collagen synthesis and a free-radical scavenger that supports photoprotection. Small, vehicle-controlled split-face trials show genuine but modest improvements in wrinkles, skin texture, and pigmentation, and it has a consistent brightening/depigmenting signal. The honest framing: the whole topical-vitamin-C trial base is tiny (a systematic review pooled ~7 studies and ~139 people), formulations are notoriously unstable (they oxidise and lose potency), and most positive trials combine vitamin C with vitamin E, ferulic acid, or other actives — so vitamin-C-alone efficacy is hard to isolate. These are cosmetic appearance outcomes, not health outcomes, and it is not a sunscreen substitute.
A topical cosmetic form of vitamin A — a leave-on skincare active applied to the skin, NOT something you swallow as a supplement and NOT prescription tretinoin. Retinol is the over-the-counter (OTC) member of the retinoid family. In skin it is converted, in two steps, to retinoic acid — the active molecule that binds nuclear retinoid receptors, nudges fibroblasts to make procollagen, and protects existing collagen from UV-driven breakdown. Several small, double-blind, vehicle-controlled facial trials show a genuine but MODEST improvement in fine lines, photodamage, and pigmentation. The catch: OTC retinol is weaker and less proven than prescription tretinoin, only a small fraction of what you apply actually converts to retinoic acid, a focused systematic review judged the OTC-retinol evidence largely untrustworthy, and it commonly causes dryness, peeling, and irritation. The benefit is a cosmetic appearance effect, not a health outcome.
A plant-derived topical skincare active marketed as a gentler 'retinol alternative' — a leave-on cosmetic applied to the skin, NOT ingested. Bakuchiol is a meroterpene purified from the seeds of Psoralea corylifolia (babchi). Despite no structural resemblance to retinoids, gene-expression studies show it behaves like a functional retinol analogue, switching on collagen genes. The headline evidence is one good 12-week randomized, double-blind trial (44 people) in which bakuchiol matched retinol for reducing wrinkles and pigmentation while causing less stinging and scaling. The honest framing: that single 44-person study carries most of the weight. The rest of the human evidence is thin — small, often unblinded or uncontrolled trials, several testing bakuchiol only inside multi-ingredient products, and many industry-linked; a 2024 systematic review judged the body of evidence high-risk-of-bias and not poolable. These are cosmetic appearance outcomes, not health outcomes. (Note: purified topical bakuchiol is distinct from oral Psoralea corylifolia, which carries hepatotoxicity and phototoxic-furocoumarin concerns.)
A topical cosmetic peptide — a leave-on skincare ingredient, NOT something you swallow, inject, or take as a supplement, and NOT a drug. Argireline (acetyl hexapeptide-8, also sold as acetyl hexapeptide-3) is a six-amino-acid fragment modelled on the SNAP-25 protein. It is marketed as 'topical Botox' because, in cell systems, it interferes with the SNARE complex that nerve endings use to release neurotransmitter, in theory slightly relaxing the tiny muscle contractions that create expression lines. There ARE real human topical studies — small, short, vehicle-controlled split-face wrinkle trials — and they do show modest reductions in the appearance of fine lines. But the effect sizes are small, several of the trials are industry-linked, and this is a cosmetic effect on wrinkle APPEARANCE, not a health outcome. It is generally well tolerated on skin. This entry exists to describe a cosmetic ingredient honestly, not to recommend an ingestible supplement.
A prescription TOPICAL retinoid (Retin-A, Renova) — the acid form of vitamin A and the gold-standard, best-evidenced topical treatment for photoaging and acne. Multiple double-blind RCTs show it reduces fine wrinkles, mottled hyperpigmentation, and roughness over months, with histologic increases in dermal collagen. Caveats: retinoid dermatitis (irritation, peeling, dryness), photosensitivity, and it is CONTRAINDICATED IN PREGNANCY. Prescription drug, not a supplement; distinct from weaker OTC 'retinol' cosmetics.
Type I collagen from fish with smaller peptide size for superior absorption — proven benefits for skin hydration and wrinkle reduction.
This information is for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any supplement or medication.