Elare Face is a polynucleotide (PN) skin booster from USKIN, formulated at 2% PN for the face. It is reported to restore elasticity, firmness, texture, and tone by supporting collagen production and cellular repair. A trained professional delivers it over a course, and the official guide is below for your records.

What is Elare Face, in plain terms?

Elare Face is an injectable skin booster built around polynucleotides, purified DNA fragments derived from salmon. PN is biocompatible and reported to support skin repair and the skin’s own collagen activity. This formula sits at a higher 2% PN and ships in a 2 ml syringe, positioned for broader facial skin quality rather than a single targeted zone.

It is not a volumizing filler. A booster like this aims to improve the quality of the skin itself, firmness, texture, and tone, over a planned course rather than in one visit. If your interest is the thinner under-eye area, USKIN makes a dedicated lower-concentration product covered in our note on Elare Eyes.

Log Notes. This explains what Elare Face is and the general science, not how to use it. It gives no doses, depths, injection points, or technique, all of which live in the official guide and belong to a trained professional. Nothing here is medical advice, and this is not a do-it-yourself procedure.

What do sources report about polynucleotides?

Published interest centers on PN as a tissue-repair and skin-quality agent. A review of polynucleotides in aesthetic dermatology describes them as studied for regeneration and skin quality, not as wrinkle fillers. Early work suggests PN may support cellular repair and collagen activity, though much of it remains preclinical or based on small clinical samples.

Two honest caveats are worth keeping in mind. First, most evidence applies to polynucleotides as a class, while a specific branded product like Elare Face is newer and less independently studied. Second, regulatory status varies: PN-based aesthetic products are more established in the UK and South Korea, and availability in the United States differs. Treat reported benefits as studied for the ingredient class, not guaranteed for you. For the wider family, see our primer on polynucleotides.

What should you expect and track?

Gradual change and a steady record. Because boosters build skin quality over weeks, the interesting differences show up across a course and the months after, not the day of treatment. A dated log makes that timeline visible instead of leaving it to memory.

A clean log usually captures the date of each session, recovery notes (any redness or small bumps, and how long they lasted), and a photo taken at a fixed distance and light, no makeup, neutral expression. Note context that moves skin too: sleep, sun exposure, new products, and stress. Skin quality is a slow signal, so the comparison that matters is month over month, not the morning after. A steady record protects you from two common traps: declaring success after one fresh-faced week, or giving up before collagen has had the weeks it needs to respond.

This is the kind of course Dosefi is built for. You add Elare Face as a tracked treatment, log each session with its date and a photo, and the interval you set surfaces the next appointment on your schedule, while your self-rated texture and firmness trends build a picture over the cycle.

A grounded takeaway

Elare Face is a 2% polynucleotide skin booster for the face, reported to support elasticity, firmness, texture, and tone. The evidence is developing and regulatory status varies by country, so read benefits as reported, not guaranteed. Keep a calm, dated record of your course and route candidacy, dosing, and technique to a licensed professional. The official guide is attached for your reference.

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