Type 5 Marketing

Ceramide & skin-barrier skincare

Ceramide Club

A barrier-first skincare guide to ceramides — moisturizers, creams, serums, and body care compared on the actual ceramide types decoded from the INCI, the cholesterol and fatty-acid pairing, and the cost per ounce almost no competitor publishes, reasoned from published labels rather than a lab it never ran.

Ceramide Club — Ceramide & skin-barrier skincare

About Ceramide Club

Ceramide Club covers skin-barrier skincare through one ingredient family: ceramides. It compares the products a routine is actually built from — ceramide moisturizers, creams, serums, and body and hand care — and sits a plain-English library beside them, from a Ceramides 101 explainer to head-to-head comparisons of ceramides against peptides, niacinamide, hyaluronic acid, and retinol. Its posture is set in two lines — "barrier-first skincare, honestly reviewed" — and a hero that names the whole method: "the ceramide reviews that actually list the ceramides," so that "best," as the site puts it, is a measured claim, not a vibe.

Its defining decision is stated where the rest of the category bluffs: "We have not lab-tested anything, and we say so," and it puts the count of products it claims to have hands-on tested at zero — it employs no dermatologists, has run no clinical trials, and "will never claim we did." What it does instead is read every product's INCI list, record the actual ceramide types and the cholesterol and fatty-acid pairing that decide how a formula works, compute the apples-to-apples cost per ounce, and cite each claim to the manufacturer's own spec sheet — a method it calls published and reproducible, checkable by any reader. Prices pull live from Amazon carrying the date shown on each page, and when a current price can't be verified the site shows none rather than a number that has gone stale.

That refusal to claim a test it never ran is exactly how Type 5 Marketing operates. The brand is reader-supported through disclosed Amazon Associates links at no extra cost to the buyer, and it says the commission never decides a verdict — when the $12 drugstore tub beats the $90 jar, it says so, even though the expensive one pays more — accepting no sponsorships and no free product. Written by Stephen V., positioned honestly as an enthusiast with "no lab coat, no lab, no borrowed credentials — just the receipts" rather than a dermatologist or cosmetic chemist, it reads the label in public, cites every claim, and admits the work it hasn't done — the standard we hold across every property in the portfolio.

Ceramide Club is owned and operated by Type 5 Marketing LLC and applies our shared review methodology and affiliate disclosure. It reflects our affiliate marketing capability in practice.

Verifying Ceramide Club for a program?

The brand links back here, applies our public methodology, and carries a clear affiliate disclosure. Reach out if you need anything else.