Makeup

Fenty Beauty Eaze Drop Blurring Skin Tint: Review

Recently found the Fenty Beauty Eaze Drop Blurring Skin Tint on Tira. It is Fenty Beauty’s answer to the skin-tint craze, a lightweight, no-makeup-makeup base that promises to even things out without looking like you’re wearing foundation. I’ve been testing it out, and here’s my honest breakdown.

Price and Quantity

Eaze Drop retails for $39 USD or Rs 4150 (in India) for 1.08 fl. oz / 32 mL of product, sold in 25 shades ranging from light-cool to deep-bronze undertones. That puts it in solid mid-range foundation territory. I purchased the shade 3 warm neutral. It is definitely pricier than a drugstore tinted moisturizer, but cheaper than a lot of prestige longwear foundations. Given that a little goes a long way (most reviewers use one to two drops per side of the face), the bottle stretches further than you’d expect, which helps soften the sting of the price tag.

The packaging itself is a simple, modern, light-weight, geometric squeeze bottle with a narrow nozzle. No pump, no dropper, just a controlled squeeze. It is compact enough to toss in a makeup bag, and the narrow opening means you’re not accidentally dispensing way more product than you meant to. I am really impressed with the packaging.

Texture

This is where Eaze Drop really earns its “skin tint” label. The formula is thin, almost lotion-like, and blends into skin with almost no effort. Fingers, a sponge, or a brush all work, though fingers or a damp sponge tend to give the most natural, blurred finish. It sets to a soft, semi-matte finish that isn’t fully matte and isn’t dewy either, more of a “healthy skin” look that sits somewhere in between. It blurs redness and small blemishes on my cheeks and gives a very even out complexion.

It builds in thin layers without ever feeling heavy or cakey, which is the whole point of a skin tint versus a traditional foundation. That said, if you try to build it up to full coverage, you will start to see and feel the product sitting on the skin rather than blurring into it. This isn’t designed to be a heavy-coverage product, and pushing it past its limits is where it falls apart a bit.

Ingredients

The formula leans heavily on silicones (dimethicone, trimethylsiloxysilicate, dimethicone crosspolymer) for that smooth, blurred slip and soft-focus effect, paired with hydrators like glycerin, sodium hyaluronate, trehalose, and urea to keep it from feeling drying despite the silicone base. It’s oil-free, which is part of why it sits so lightly on skin and resists getting greasy throughout the day. Talc and silica help with the soft-focus, pore-blurring effect, while iron oxides and titanium dioxide provide the tint.

On the “good to know” side: it’s vegan, cruelty-free, and free of parabens and phthalates. It does contain talc, which is worth flagging if you specifically avoid that ingredient, and the silicone-heavy formula means it may not be the best pick if your skin tends to react to dimethicone or breaks out with silicone-based products.

My Take

Eaze Drop genuinely lives up to its name. It’s an “ease into it” kind of product, not a full transformation. The blurring effect on pores and minor texture is real and noticeably better than what you get from most tinted moisturizers, and the lightweight feel makes it an easy reach-for on lazy mornings or hot, humid days when a full foundation feels like too much. It plays nicely with skincare and primer underneath, and it resists transfer and sweat better than its featherweight feel would suggest.

Where it falls short: don’t expect it to cover anything beyond mild redness, unevenness, or a few small blemishes. Some shades can also oxidize slightly darker in the first few minutes after application, so don’t panic if your shade looks a touch off right out of the bottle. And at this price point, it’s not an impulse buy if you’re not sure your shade is right, though Fenty’s and Tira’s virtual shade-matching tools are helpful here.

Bottom line: if you love your skin and just want to even it out without hiding it, Eaze Drop is one of the better skin tints on the market right now. If you need real coverage for redness, scarring, or hyperpigmentation, this isn’t the product to lean on alone but it makes an excellent base to build on.

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