Argireline (acetyl hexapeptide-8, sometimes labelled acetyl hexapeptide-3) is a topical peptide marketed as "Botox in a bottle." It targets dynamic wrinkles, the lines that show up when you move your face: crow's feet, forehead lines, the creases between your brows. The pitch is that it relaxes the tiny muscle contractions that fold skin into those lines, without needles.
It does something, but it is a fraction of what an injection does. In studies it reduces wrinkle depth by roughly a quarter to a half over a month of twice-daily use, and that is the optimistic end, run on high concentrations in controlled conditions. It is best understood as a mild, gradual softener for early dynamic lines, and it works for men and women equally since the mechanism has nothing to do with hormones. If you have deep static wrinkles already etched in, this is not your tool.
Deep-dive
Dosage:
- Look for products with Argireline (acetyl hexapeptide-8) at 5 to 10%, which is the range used in the studies that showed an effect. Many serums contain far less or do not disclose the concentration, in which case assume it is low
- Apply twice daily, morning and night, to clean dry skin, before heavier creams and oils. Concentrate it on areas of dynamic movement: crow's feet, forehead, between the brows
- A serum is generally a better vehicle than a thick cream or a watery toner, since penetration is the limiting factor. Products built around the peptide tend to outperform ones where it is an afterthought
- Give it a full 4 to 12 weeks of consistent daily use before judging it. The effect is cumulative and disappears within weeks of stopping, so it only works as an ongoing habit
- No dose difference between men and women. Men may want to favour the higher end of the concentration range given thicker skin, though this is reasoning from mechanism, not from trial data
- It layers fine with most routines. Pair it with Vitamin C (topical) , Niacinamide, or a retinoid (Vitamin A) for an effect on static lines and overall skin quality, which is the gap Argireline does not cover. Note that some manufacturer guidance suggests the peptide can be destabilised by strong reducing agents and certain acids, so if you use a low-pH vitamin C or an exfoliating acid, applying them at a different time of day is a sensible hedge
- Daily SPF 50 does more for wrinkle prevention than Argireline will, and the two are complementary, not alternatives
Here's what you can expect:
Nothing immediate. Over 4 weeks of consistent twice-daily use, the realistic outcome is a subtle softening of fine expression lines and skin that looks slightly smoother and better hydrated. It is the kind of change you might notice in good light or in photos, not a visible relaxation of the face. Deeper, static wrinkles that are already set into the skin will not meaningfully shift. The effect is gradual and stays mild, and it fades within a few weeks once you stop, so it behaves like an ongoing maintenance product rather than a treatment with lasting results. If you are expecting anything close to an injectable, you will be disappointed, that is the most common reason people abandon it.
Side effects & risks:
- Argireline has a clean safety profile for topical use. The CIR safety assessment found no skin sensitisation in a 50-subject repeat-insult patch test and judged it non-irritating to skin and eyes at cosmetic concentrations
- Mild irritation, redness, or a tingling sensation can occur on initial use, particularly on sensitive skin. It is usually transient. As with any new active, patch test before applying it near the eyes
- Occasional mild dryness, easily managed with a moisturiser on top