$64 is a serious moisturizer price.
That is the first thing I would keep in mind with SOFIE PAVITT FACE Omega Rich Moisturizer. The product is not trying to be a basic cream you grab without thinking. It is a rich, non-comedogenic moisturizer built for dewy hydration, dry or combination skin, and people who want barrier support without feeling like they are putting a heavy pore-clogging layer over their face.
That is a real problem.
The hardest moisturizer to find is not always the richest one. It is the rich one that does not make acne-prone or combination skin panic. Omega Rich sits in that tension. It has omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, squalane, jojoba oil, sunflower seed oil, argan oil, glycerin, and a cream texture meant for the face and neck morning and night.
As of May 2026, my short answer is this: I would consider Omega Rich if my skin was dry, normal, or dry-combination and I wanted a richer moisturizer that still takes clogged-pore anxiety seriously. I would skip it if my skin is very oily, if I only want a weightless gel, or if I already have a cheaper moisturizer that keeps my skin comfortable without new bumps.

The quick read
| Detail | My read |
|---|---|
| Product | SOFIE PAVITT FACE Omega Rich Moisturizer |
| May 2026 price | $64 |
| Size | 1.7 oz / 50 mL |
| Texture lane | Rich cream moisturizer |
| Best fit | Normal, dry, or combination skin that wants comfort without a greasy-feeling routine |
| Main ingredients I notice | Glycerin, squalane, linoleic acid, linolenic acid, jojoba oil, sunflower seed oil, argan oil |
| Product positioning | Rich, non-comedogenic, dewy, barrier-supporting |
| Biggest catch | Rich still means rich, so oily skin should test slowly |
The most useful way to read this product is not "Is it good?" That question is too broad. The better question is whether your routine needs richer comfort or lighter control.
Why this moisturizer caught my attention
SOFIE PAVITT FACE already has Skin Jelly Oil-Free Gel Moisturizer, which is the obvious choice for oily, acne-prone, moisturizer-avoidant skin. Omega Rich is the other side of the brand's moisturizer logic.
It is for the person who cannot get by on a jelly texture.
That person might still be acne-prone. They might still worry about clogged pores. They might still hate greasy creams. But their skin also gets tight, dull, flaky, or uncomfortable when the routine is too light. A gel moisturizer can feel elegant in the morning and still leave the cheeks asking for more by bedtime.
That is where Omega Rich makes sense. It is not trying to disappear. It is trying to feel nourishing without turning into a heavy balm.
What the formula is trying to do
The formula has three jobs.
First, it hydrates. Glycerin and propanediol are the basic moisture-support pieces I would expect in a cream that wants to feel comfortable.
Second, it softens and seals. Squalane, jojoba oil, sunflower seed oil, and argan oil all sit in the emollient lane. They help make skin feel smoother and more cushioned.
Third, it supports the barrier story. Linoleic acid and linolenic acid are the omega fatty acids here. I would not buy a moisturizer because of one ingredient name alone, but this ingredient direction makes sense for a product aimed at dry, dull, or barrier-tired skin.
The key is that this is still a cosmetic moisturizer. I would not treat it like a prescription treatment, a dark-spot serum, or an acne medication. Its value is comfort, routine stability, and moisture support.
Who I think Omega Rich fits best
I would put Omega Rich in front of someone who says:
- my skin feels dry but breaks out from some heavy creams
- my cheeks need more than a gel moisturizer
- my acne routine makes my face feel tight
- I want a dewy finish, not a matte finish
- my skin looks dull when my moisturizer is too light
- I want one cream for face and neck
- I want richer comfort but still care about non-comedogenic positioning
The cleanest fit is dry-combination skin. That means the cheeks or jaw feel under-moisturized, but the T-zone can still get shiny or congested.
For that skin type, I would not automatically use the same amount everywhere. More on the cheeks. Less on the forehead and nose. The product can be rich without needing to be applied like a mask.
Who should skip it
I would skip Omega Rich if your skin is very oily and you already know creams make you uncomfortable. If you want the lighter SOFIE PAVITT FACE moisturizer lane, Skin Jelly is the more logical first stop.
I would also skip it if your current moisturizer works perfectly. That sounds obvious, but it is easy to forget when a product has better positioning than your boring old jar. If your skin is comfortable, your sunscreen layers cleanly, and you are not getting new clogged bumps, you may not need to change the moisturizer step.
I would be cautious if your skin is actively inflamed, burning, swollen, rashy, or reacting to everything. That is not the moment to test a rich new cream. Simplify first. If symptoms are severe or persistent, get clinician help instead of trying to shop your way out of it.
Acne-prone skin is the real question
The most interesting part of Omega Rich is the acne-prone anxiety around it.
People with breakouts often hear "rich cream" and assume danger. That is understandable. A moisturizer that feels too heavy can make the whole routine feel wrong. But skipping moisturizer can also backfire, especially if the routine includes benzoyl peroxide, salicylic acid, adapalene, tretinoin, or other drying treatment steps.
I would not call Omega Rich an acne treatment. I would call it a possible support cream for acne-prone skin that is dry, treated, or barrier-tired.
The test is not whether the product sounds acne-safe. The test is whether your skin can use it for two to three weeks without new congestion, greasy discomfort, or sunscreen problems.
The review signal I would actually trust
The product has enough review volume to take seriously, but I would not buy from the star number alone. I would look for patterns.
For Omega Rich, the useful review patterns are:
- dry skin feels more comfortable
- skin looks dewier without feeling coated
- makeup sits better over the moisturizer
- people using active routines feel less tight
- acne-prone users do not see a sudden closed-comedone pattern
- oily users are honest when it feels too rich
That last pattern matters. A moisturizer can be excellent and still be wrong for oily skin. I would rather see clear fit feedback than universal praise that makes the product sound impossible to misuse.
How I would test it
I would test Omega Rich at night first.
Night is more forgiving because you are not immediately layering sunscreen, makeup, sweat, and a whole day of touching your face over it. I would cleanse, apply any treatment I already tolerate, then use a modest amount of Omega Rich.
For the first week, I would not add any other new product. No new cleanser. No new serum. No new sunscreen. No new exfoliant. If the skin changes, I want to know what changed.
| Test window | What I would watch |
|---|---|
| Nights 1-3 | Stinging, warmth, greasy feeling, immediate comfort |
| Days 4-7 | New bumps, morning shine, dry patches improving |
| Week 2 | Whether the skin feels steadier after cleansing and treatment |
| End of test | Whether the cream solved a real problem or just felt luxurious |
If it works at night, then I would test a smaller amount in the morning under sunscreen.
Morning routine fit
Morning is the harder test.
A rich moisturizer has to sit under SPF without pilling, sliding, or turning the face into a shiny layer by noon. Omega Rich may be perfect for dry morning skin, but combination skin may need less product.
My morning approach would be:
- Gentle cleanse or rinse.
- Hydrating serum only if it already belongs.
- Small amount of Omega Rich, focused on dry zones.
- Sunscreen.
- Makeup if you wear it.
I would give the moisturizer a few minutes before sunscreen. If the sunscreen is already creamy, I would use less Omega Rich. If the sunscreen is matte or drying, I might use a normal amount.
The moisturizer and sunscreen have to work as a pair.
Night routine fit
Night is where Omega Rich has the clearest role.
If your skin feels depleted after cleansing, treatment, or a dry day, a richer cream can make the routine easier to keep. This is especially true if you are using actives that help acne or texture but leave the face feeling tight.
A simple night routine could be:
- Cleanser.
- Treatment on planned nights.
- Omega Rich.
That is enough. I would not bury the cream under five serums and then blame it for feeling heavy. A rich moisturizer often works best when the rest of the routine is not crowded.
How it compares to Skin Jelly
Skin Jelly is the lighter lane. Omega Rich is the richer lane.
If your face is oily by lunch and moisturizers make you nervous, Skin Jelly is the better first choice. If your cheeks feel dry, your skin looks dull, or your acne routine leaves you tight, Omega Rich is the more logical test.
The brand having both products is useful because you do not have to force one texture to solve every situation. You could use Skin Jelly in the morning and Omega Rich at night. You could use Omega Rich only on dry zones. You could switch seasonally.
The right answer may be placement, not loyalty.
For more context on the lighter option, read I checked Sofie Pavitt Skin Jelly reviews and the $54 price in May 2026.
The price question
At $64, Omega Rich needs to earn its place.
I would justify the price if it solves one of these problems:
- my lighter moisturizer is not enough at night
- my dry-combination skin needs comfort without a greasy balm
- my acne treatment routine is getting hard to tolerate
- my sunscreen looks better when my skin is more moisturized underneath
- my neck needs a better moisturizer than whatever is left on my hands
I would not justify the price if I am simply bored.
Skincare boredom is expensive. If the product does not fill a clear hole, the price gets much harder to defend.
Mistakes I would avoid
I would avoid using too much. The product direction mentions a quarter-size amount for face and neck, but I would still adjust by skin type. Dry skin may like that. Combination skin may need less.
I would avoid testing it during a full routine reset. If you start Omega Rich at the same time as a new retinoid, a new sunscreen, and a new cleanser, you will not know what caused the result.
I would avoid using it as proof that your barrier is fixed. A moisturizer can make the skin feel better while the routine still needs work.
And I would avoid treating non-comedogenic like a magic shield. It is a helpful label, not a personal guarantee.
What I would track in Glass
I would track three things:
- morning tightness
- new clogged bumps
- sunscreen finish
That is enough. You do not need to over-measure every pore. If the skin feels more comfortable, the bumps do not increase, and the morning routine still works, the cream is doing its job.
If your routine changes often, logging it in Glass can help separate the moisturizer from everything else. The goal is not obsession. The goal is fewer guesses.
Bottom line
SOFIE PAVITT FACE Omega Rich Moisturizer makes the most sense for normal, dry, and dry-combination skin that wants a richer cream without abandoning clogged-pore caution. I would use it as a night cream first, then test a smaller daytime amount under sunscreen.
The best buyer is not someone who wants the richest possible cream. It is someone whose skin needs comfort, dew, and barrier support but still wants the moisturizer step to behave.
FAQ
Is Omega Rich good for acne-prone skin?
I would consider it for acne-prone skin that is dry, treated, or barrier-tired. I would not treat it like acne medicine, and I would test it slowly.
Is it better for dry skin or oily skin?
It is more naturally suited to dry, normal, and combination skin. Very oily skin will usually prefer a lighter gel like Skin Jelly.
Can I use it morning and night?
Yes, but I would adjust the amount. Morning use depends on how it layers with your sunscreen. Night use is the easier first test.
Is the $64 price worth it?
It can be worth it if it solves a specific dryness, comfort, or barrier-support problem. If your current moisturizer already works, I would not upgrade just because this sounds more polished.

