Quick answer: the Klairs Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop is a budget stand-in for the Youth to the People 15% Vitamin C + Clear Skin Serum — 66% active overlap sharing Vitamin C. It also overlaps with 4 other picks below.
Pricier picks the Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop matches
Youth to the People
66%
Active overlap
Pricier pickVitamin C
Why it holds up: shares the same hero active — Vitamin C — which is what drives results here.
Full ingredient analysis →See them side by side →Paula's Choice
66%
Active overlap
Pricier pickVitamin C
Why it holds up: shares the same hero active — Vitamin C — which is what drives results here.
Full ingredient analysis →See them side by side →Paula's Choice
66%
Active overlap
Pricier pickVitamin C
Why it holds up: shares the same hero active — Vitamin C — which is what drives results here.
Full ingredient analysis →See them side by side →Paula's Choice
66%
Active overlap
Pricier pickVitamin C
Why it holds up: shares the same hero active — Vitamin C — which is what drives results here.
Full ingredient analysis →See them side by side →Ole Henriksen
66%
Active overlap
Pricier pickVitamin C
Why it holds up: shares the same hero active — Vitamin C — which is what drives results here.
Full ingredient analysis →See them side by side →Every match above mirrors an existing dupe page verbatim — re-derived from the 5 comparisons where the Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop appears as an alternative. No invented data.
Common questions
Is the Klairs Freshly Juiced Vitamin Drop a real dupe?
It overlaps on hero actives with 5 same-category products in our catalogue — most closely the Youth to the People 15% Vitamin C + Clear Skin Serum at 66% active overlap. "Dupe" here means shared active ingredients, not an identical formula.
Does a higher overlap mean it is better?
No — overlap only measures shared hero actives. Base, supporting actives, texture and price still differ, so use the side-by-side compare for the full picture.
Educational information only — not medical advice. Overlap reflects shared hero actives, not clinical equivalence.