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All articlesMay 12, 2026
Fenty Beauty by RihannaRhodeFace MistHydrating MistMay 2026

Fenty Dew N Plump Face Mist vs Rhode Glazing Mist in May 2026

A practical May 2026 comparison of Fenty Beauty by Rihanna Dew N Plump Hydrating Nectar Face Mist and Rhode Glazing Mist for hydration, glow, fragrance, makeup prep, and sensitive skin.

Glass Editorial Team

Glass Editorial Team

Skincare routines, ingredient education, and consistency tips.

Fenty Dew N Plump Face Mist vs Rhode Glazing Mist in May 2026

Fenty Dew N Plump and Rhode Glazing Mist look like they belong in the same conversation.

Both are glowy face mists. Both sit in that newer skincare lane where a spray is supposed to do more than feel cool for five seconds. Both make sense for people who want hydration without adding another cream.

But I would not choose between them by asking which one is more popular.

I would choose by asking a better question:

Do you want a juicy, scented, makeup-friendly Fenty mist, or a fragrance-free Rhode mist with more obvious barrier-support language?

That is the real split.

Fenty Beauty by Rihanna Dew N Plump Hydrating Nectar Face Mist is the one I would consider for a sensorial, soft-focus, hydrating prep step. Rhode Glazing Mist Hydrating Face Spray is the one I would consider if fragrance-free and ceramide-focused comfort matter more.

Fenty Beauty by Rihanna Dew N Plump Hydrating Nectar Face Mist bottle

The quick verdict

Choose Fenty Dew N Plump if you want a scented, juicy, glowy mist that feels made for skin prep, makeup refresh, and a more playful routine.

Choose Rhode Glazing Mist if you want a fragrance-free, ceramide-and-ectoin mist that feels more barrier-minded and sensitive-skin aware.

I would not treat either as a replacement for moisturizer.

I would not treat either as a true makeup-locking spray.

The winner depends on what you need the mist to do after the fun first spray wears off.

Product snapshot

ProductImagePrice signal in May 2026Best fitMain watch-out
Fenty Dew N Plump Face MistFenty Dew N Plump Face Mist bottle$34Juicy glow, makeup prep, scented skincare momentFragrance-sensitive skin may not love it
Rhode Glazing MistRhode Glazing Mist bottle$30Fragrance-free glow, barrier-support feel, sensitive-skin shoppersMay still feel too glowy or not rich enough for very dry skin

The prices are close enough that I would not let four dollars decide the purchase.

Fit matters more.

The real difference

Fenty reads like a nectar mist.

Rhode reads like a barrier-glow mist.

That may sound like branding, but it shows up in the formulas. Fenty centers polyglutamic acid, hyaluronic acid, glycerin, betaine, aloe, and fruit juices. Rhode centers ectoin, glycerin, panthenol, beta-glucan, ceramides, cholesterol, phytosphingosine, and magnolia extract.

In plain English:

If you want...Start with...
A more sensorial, juicy sprayFenty
A fragrance-free mistRhode
A makeup-prep glow stepFenty
A barrier-support mist with ceramidesRhode
A product that feels more funFenty
A product that feels more skin-cautiousRhode

Neither split is moral. It is routine fit.

Formula personality

Fenty is built around water-binding comfort and a dewy experience.

The ingredient list includes aloe juice, glycerin, betaine, propanediol, butylene glycol, sodium polyglutamate, hyaluronic acid, fruit juices, and light emollient support. It also includes fragrance and citrus-related scent components.

That tells me the product wants to feel juicy, fresh, and polished.

Rhode is built around hydration plus barrier language. Its formula includes glycerin, panthenol, ectoin, beta-glucan, ceramides NP, AP, and EOP, cholesterol, phytosphingosine, and magnolia extract. It is fragrance-free.

That tells me the product wants to feel glowy but more restrained and comfort-led.

If your routine already has a lot of fragrance and glow, Rhode may be the calmer add. If your routine feels boring and you want a fun prep spray, Fenty may feel more satisfying.

Fragrance is the biggest decision point

This is the part I would decide first.

Fenty has fragrance.

Rhode is fragrance-free.

If your skin never reacts to scented skincare and you enjoy a fresh product experience, Fenty's scent may be part of why you like using it. A product you enjoy can make a routine easier to repeat.

If fragrance makes your cheeks sting, your eyes water, your skin flush, or your face feel itchy later, Rhode is the more obvious first pick.

I would not talk myself into a scented face mist if my skin has already made that rule clear. Leave-on fragrance is not worth guessing through if the face usually objects.

Texture and finish

Both products are trying to leave skin glowy.

The question is what kind of glow you want.

Fenty sounds more nectar-like. I would expect a juicy, soft, freshly hydrated finish that fits well with a makeup-prep routine.

Rhode sounds more glazed and watery. I would expect a superfine mist that gives a hydrated finish without the same scented, fruity personality.

Neither should be used until the face is soaked. With either one, more sprays can turn glow into wetness. That is especially true if you already use a rich moisturizer, dewy sunscreen, or luminous foundation.

If you are trying to avoid looking oily, the oily-skin glass-skin guide is the better frame. The goal is controlled reflection, not a slippery face.

Makeup prep

For makeup prep, I would give Fenty the edge if fragrance is not an issue.

It feels more directly aligned with the person who wants foundation to look fresh, skin tint to spread better, or powder to stop looking dry. The product story is very much about prep, revive, and refresh.

I would use it like this:

  1. Cleanse or rinse.
  2. Spray one light layer.
  3. Apply moisturizer if needed.
  4. Apply sunscreen.
  5. Wait.
  6. Apply makeup.

Rhode can also work under makeup, especially if your skin likes fragrance-free products and you want a smoother barrier feel. But if I were buying mainly for makeup days, Fenty feels like the more obvious choice.

If your sunscreen is the step that keeps misbehaving, read the sunscreen pilling guide before blaming the mist.

Makeup refresh

Over makeup, I would use either mist carefully.

The job is to soften dry-looking makeup, not to reset the whole face. One or two sprays can make powder look less dusty. Five sprays can make foundation move.

Fenty may feel more satisfying if your base looks flat and you want a juicy finish. Rhode may be nicer if your face is sensitive, your eyes get annoyed easily, or you want less scent around makeup.

I would not use either as a substitute for a true long-wear spray. If your makeup disappears because of oil or sweat, the better answer is primer, powder placement, product amount, and a dedicated setting or fixing product.

Dry skin

For dry skin, either can work, but I would choose based on why the skin feels dry.

Choose Fenty if the issue is dullness, flat makeup, or that bare tight feeling right after cleansing.

Choose Rhode if the issue is dryness plus sensitivity, barrier stress, or a preference for fragrance-free products.

I would still use moisturizer with both. A mist can give the routine a hydrated starting point, but dry skin usually needs something creamier on top.

If your face feels tight even after cream, this tight-skin guide is a better first step than adding sprays.

Oily and combination skin

For oily or combination skin, I would be more conservative.

Fenty can work if you like a dewy look and use a small amount. It may be especially nice on cheeks that feel tight while the T-zone gets shiny.

Rhode can work if you want hydration without fragrance and like the idea of ceramides and ectoin in a light spray.

But I would not spray either all over the face every hour. Oily skin often needs targeted hydration, not constant wetness.

My oily-skin test would be:

ZoneHow I would use the mist
CheeksLight spray before moisturizer or SPF
NoseUse less, or skip if shine builds fast
ForeheadUse only if tight or powdery
ChinWatch for new bumps before daily use

This is where Glass tracking helps. Oily skin feedback can be delayed. A product may feel great on Monday and show congestion by Friday.

Sensitive and acne-prone skin

For sensitive skin, Rhode is the easier first pick because it is fragrance-free and carries a more cautious skin-support profile.

For acne-prone skin, I would not assume either mist is automatically safe just because it is lightweight. Lightweight products can still bother some people. The smarter move is to test one product at a time and watch your usual breakout zones.

Fenty has fragrance, so I would be careful if acne and sensitivity overlap.

Rhode is fragrance-free, but it still has emollient and barrier-support ingredients, so I would watch for congestion if your skin clogs from richer-feeling products.

The best acne-prone routine is not the one with the most exciting mist. It is the one you can repeat without making inflammation angrier.

Value in May 2026

Fenty is $34. Rhode is $30.

That is close enough that value comes down to use.

Fenty has better value if you will use it before makeup, enjoy the scent, and actually reach for the juicy finish.

Rhode has better value if fragrance-free matters, if you want barrier-support ingredients, or if you already know scented sprays become clutter.

The wasteful buy is not the more expensive bottle. The wasteful buy is the one that does not fit your rules.

How I would test them

I would not test both at the same time.

That is how the feedback gets muddy. Pick one and use it for a week.

DayTest
1Use after cleansing at night, then moisturize
2Use under morning sunscreen, no makeup
3Use under makeup
4Skip it and compare comfort
5Use as a midday makeup refresh
6Use only on cheeks
7Decide whether it solved a real problem

Track tightness, shine, pilling, stinging, makeup separation, and bumps.

If nothing meaningful changes, you do not need a mist. That is allowed.

Good alternatives inside the same routine lane

If neither product feels exactly right, I would look at the role you actually need.

For a milky hydration step, LANEIGE Cream Skin Milky Toner may make more sense if you want a toner-mist feel with a more nourishing lane.

For simple dry-skin structure, the dehydrated routine guide is more useful than adding another glowy product.

For routine consistency, Glass can help you log which mist you used, where it sat in the routine, and whether the finish actually improved over time.

And if you already have Rhode in your cart, the existing Rhode Caffeine Reset Mask guide gives more context on where Rhode's skincare lane can fit without turning the routine into a full brand shelf.

FAQ

Is Fenty Dew N Plump better than Rhode Glazing Mist?

It is better if you want a scented, juicy, makeup-friendly mist. Rhode is better if you want fragrance-free barrier-support language and a calmer first pick for sensitive skin.

Which is better under makeup?

I would start with Fenty for makeup prep if fragrance is fine. I would start with Rhode if scent or eye-area sensitivity is a concern.

Which is better for dry skin?

Both can help dry-looking skin feel fresher, but neither replaces moisturizer. Rhode is the more barrier-minded choice. Fenty is the more sensorial glow choice.

Which is better for oily skin?

Use either lightly. Fenty may look too dewy if you already get shiny fast. Rhode may be easier to control, but the finish still needs testing.

Which one would I buy first?

I would buy Rhode first for fragrance-sensitive skin. I would buy Fenty first for makeup prep and a more enjoyable scented routine moment.

Bottom line

Fenty Dew N Plump and Rhode Glazing Mist are not duplicates.

Fenty is the juicy, scented, makeup-prep mist. Rhode is the fragrance-free, barrier-support glow mist.

If your skin likes fragrance and your makeup looks better with a dewy prep step, Fenty is the more fun first pick. If your skin is sensitive, scent-avoidant, or barrier-focused, Rhode is the cleaner choice.

Pick the one that fits your routine rules, then test it slowly enough to know whether it actually helped.

Keep the routine readable after the article.

Bring scans, routine, and weekly shifts into one calmer loop instead of juggling notes, tabs, and screenshots.

Need the local layer first? Browse the city and state directory before you come back to the routine.

Keep the scan, routine, and weekly shift in one calmer loop.

Glass