Side-by-side comparison

Byoma Creamy Jelly Cleanser vs Cetaphil Gentle Skin Cleanser

Both are cleansers. They share a 50% active-ingredient overlap, so the real decision is about price, texture and the supporting ingredients. Here's the side-by-side.

50%Active overlap
Byoma
CleanserBudgetMorning or evening
SensitivityDamaged BarrierDryness

A jelly-to-cream gentle cleanser built on Byoma's tri-ceramide barrier complex. Non-stripping daily cleansing that supports the barrier; a good sensitive-skin pick, though not a heavy makeup remover.

Cetaphil
CleanserBudgetMorning or evening
sensitiveDamaged BarrierAcne-prone skin

The canonical dermatologist-recommended mild cleanser — nearly-neutral pH, minimal surfactant strength, fragrance-free. Not the best choice for removing SPF or makeup, but excellent as a second cleanse or daily wash for dry/sensitive skin.

The verdict

Which should you choose?

Both sit in the Budget tier, so cost isn't the deciding factor here — choose on texture, finish and the supporting ingredients. The Byoma leans toward Dryness, Sensitivity. The Cetaphil leans toward sensitive.

The overlap

What they share

At 50% active overlap, these are the ingredients doing comparable work in both formulas:

CeramidesGlycerin
The formulation

Ingredient stacks, side by side

Byoma — top of the list

  • Aqua~50–80%
  • Glycerin~5–25%
  • Coco-Betaine~3–10%
  • Sodium Cocoyl I…~2–6%
  • Ceramide NP~1.5–4%

Cetaphil — top of the list

  • Water~50–80%
  • Cetyl Alcohol~5–25%
  • Propylene Glycol~3–10%
  • Sodium Lauryl …~2–6%
  • Stearyl Alcohol~1.5–4%
  • Methylparaben~1–2%

● marks ingredients that appear near the top of both lists. Percentages are positional estimates from INCI order, not disclosed doses.

At a glance

The specs

ByomaCetaphil
CategoryCleanserCleanser
Price tierBudgetBudget
Best forSensitivity, Damaged Barrier, Drynesssensitive, Damaged Barrier
Usage notesMorning or eveningMorning or evening
Active overlap50% — Ceramides, Glycerin
Questions

Common questions

Is the Byoma Creamy Jelly Cleanser or the Cetaphil Gentle Skin Cleanser better?
Neither is clearly better — they overlap 50% on active ingredients and sit in the same price tier. The difference comes down to texture, finish and the supporting ingredients, so the right choice depends on your skin type and preferences.
What's the difference between the Byoma Creamy Jelly Cleanser and the Cetaphil Gentle Skin Cleanser?
Both are cleansers that share Ceramides, Glycerin. Where they differ: the Byoma targets Dryness, Sensitivity; the Cetaphil targets sensitive.
Are the Byoma Creamy Jelly Cleanser and Cetaphil Gentle Skin Cleanser dupes for each other?
They share 50% active-ingredient overlap based on published INCI lists, so one can stand in for the other on the actives that matter — chiefly Ceramides, Glycerin. A dupe matches the hero actives, not the full sensory experience, so expect differences in texture, fragrance and exact concentrations.
Can I use the Byoma Creamy Jelly Cleanser and Cetaphil Gentle Skin Cleanser together?
They both fill the cleanser slot in a routine, so you'd normally pick one rather than layer both. If you want to use both, treat one as your daytime option and the other for evening, and patch-test when introducing anything new.
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