Inno Gialuron is a leave-on facial moisturising cream based on hyaluronic acid. It is for adults with dry, tight, or early ageing-looking skin needing daily hydration support. It works as a humectant that binds water at the skin surface to improve softness and plumpness.
What is it?
Inno Gialuron is a topical moisturising cream built around hyaluronic acid to support skin hydration and soften the look of fine lines. It suits adults with dryness, tightness, or early visible ageing who want a leave-on product for daily facial care. Hyaluronic acid works by binding water in the upper skin layers, which can make skin feel plumper and smoother.
Composition
Inno Gialuron is a topical moisturising cream built around hyaluronic acid to support skin hydration and soften the look of fine lines.
How to use?
Used to support skin hydration and elasticity in adults with dry or dehydrated skin, and as an adjunct to cosmetic routines aimed at improving skin comfort and smoothness. It may also be used to help maintain moisture balance during seasonal dryness or after sun and environmental stress.
How does it work?
- Route: oral (capsules/tablets)
- Dose: 120–240 mg hyaluronic acid per day (total daily amount)
- Frequency: 1–2 times/day
- Timing: with food, preferably at the same time each day
- Duration: 8–12 weeks, then reassess; can be continued if well tolerated
- How to take: swallow with 200–250 mL water; do not exceed 240 mg/day unless advised by a healthcare professional
Indications
It suits adults with dryness, tightness, or early visible ageing who want a leave-on product for daily facial care.
Contraindications
- Known allergy to hyaluronic acid, folic acid, or any cosmetic preservative used in creams
- Hives, facial swelling, blistering, or intense burning after application
- Active infected skin lesions on the area you plan to treat (oozing, honey-coloured crusting, painful pus-filled bumps)
- Severe eczema flare on the face where a clinician has restricted leave-on products to specific barrier ointments only
- Avoid applying to the eyelid margins or directly into the eyes
- Keep it away from freshly ablated skin after aggressive procedures until the skin has re-epithelialised
Not recommended for
- Do not use if you have ever reacted badly to hyaluronic acid or to ingredients commonly used to preserve creams.
- Stop using it if you get strong burning, swelling, hives, or blistering after applying it.
- Avoid using it over areas that look infected or are oozing, crusted, or filled with painful pus bumps.
- If your face eczema is flaring and your clinician has limited you to specific barrier ointments, follow that plan instead.
- Keep it away from the lash line and eyes, and avoid freshly resurfaced or raw skin until it has healed.
Common mistakes
- Applying to completely dry skin in an air-conditioned room. Hyaluronic acid performs better when there is some surface water to bind.
- Using too much product at once. A thick layer can roll under sunscreen or makeup and end up being wiped off.
- Rubbing aggressively. Friction triggers redness and can worsen sensitive-skin flushing.
- Treating it like a spot corrector. Hydration products work best over the whole face and neck area, not only on a wrinkle line.
- Mixing with strong acids on the same night. If you use glycolic or salicylic acid, alternate evenings when your barrier is reactive.
One more insider detail: if you get stinging only around the nostrils, it often means the skin barrier there is already compromised from wiping or nasal sprays; reduce frequency and moisturise that area first.
Doctor opinions
In clinic, dermatologists often describe hyaluronic acid as a “comfort active”: it helps many patients tolerate a routine long enough to see benefits from sunscreen and gentle retinoids. They also point out that the best results happen when hydration is paired with UV protection, because UV exposure drives collagen breakdown and pigment changes more than dryness does. The EMA’s 2026 cosmetovigilance and skin-safety discussions around topical products keep emphasising irritation monitoring and prompt discontinuation if symptoms suggest contact dermatitis, since repeated exposure can turn mild redness into a persistent problem. [3]
A small detail from day-to-day practice: patients who complain that hyaluronic acid “made me drier” often applied it to a fully dry face in a very dry room, then skipped an occlusive layer on top. In arid air, a humectant can pull water upward and still evaporate unless it is sealed.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, hyaluronic-acid moisturisers are commonly paired with retinoids to reduce dryness and improve adherence to a routine. Use the retinoid first on dry skin, allow it to absorb, then apply Inno Gialuron to reduce tightness. With vitamin C in the morning, apply the vitamin C first, then Inno Gialuron, then sunscreen. WHO skin health guidance in 2026 continues to prioritise sunscreen as the key anti-ageing step in daily routines. [5]
It can be, but technique matters. Use a small amount, focus on areas that feel tight, and avoid heavy layering with multiple occlusive products if you clog easily. If you get uniform tiny bumps (closed comedones), scale back frequency and amount first before deciding it does not suit you. For inflammatory acne, moisturising still helps, but it should sit alongside an acne plan rather than replacing it.
Stop and rinse with lukewarm water if burning is strong or persistent. If redness is mild and fades quickly, restart after a few days using a thinner layer on damp skin and avoid the nostril folds and corners of the mouth at first. Persistent redness, swelling, or blistering suggests contact dermatitis and calls for complete discontinuation. Do not “push through” a reaction for a week.
Use caution. The under-eye area tolerates gentle moisturisers, but the eyelid margins are sensitive and product migration can sting if it gets into the eyes. Apply a rice-grain amount and keep a safe distance from the lash line. If your eyes water or burn, stop using it in that area.
Hydration can improve the look of dullness and make pigment look less patchy, but it does not treat melasma biology. For pigment concerns, daily broad-spectrum sunscreen and targeted actives (used carefully) matter more than a hydrating cream alone. If your spots are new, irregular, or changing, they need medical assessment since not all pigmentation is cosmetic. Keep expectations realistic and focus on barrier support plus UV protection.
Authenticity and Quality of Inno Gialuron
People shopping online usually care about two things: is the formulation consistent, and is it made under controls that reduce contamination and instability. In practice, “international quality certificate” language is often used in marketing, but what matters clinically is whether a product is manufactured and handled under quality systems that keep microbial load low and ingredients stable, because compromised creams can worsen irritation or trigger folliculitis.
Proper Storage of Inno Gialuron
Storage affects texture, smell, and how well preservatives do their job. Keep Inno Gialuron tightly closed between uses, because repeated air exposure dries product at the opening and increases the chance of contamination.
Store it at normal room temperature away from direct sun and heat sources, since heat can thin creams and make them separate. Bathrooms are convenient but often humid; if your bathroom stays steamy, a bedroom drawer is a steadier option. If the nozzle gets blocked, wipe the tip with clean tissue rather than pushing it through with a pin, because puncturing the opening can allow more air and microbes in.
Reviews and Experiences
Sources
- Cochrane (2025). Topical interventions for dry skin: emollients and humectants (including hyaluronic acid) — evidence summary. ↑
- WHO (2026). Guidance on skin health, irritant contact dermatitis, and safe use of topical products. ↑
- EMA (European Medicines Agency) (2026). Cosmetovigilance and safety considerations for topical products applied to intact and compromised skin. ↑
- PubMed (2026). Hyaluronic acid in dermatology: topical hydration outcomes and tolerability — indexed clinical review. ↑
- MOHAP (Ministry of Health and Prevention) (2026). Public health guidance on safe cosmetic use and skin reaction warning signs. ↑