Review: Just How Good Is Eye Therapy Under Eye Mask by BeautyPro? I Found Out

Is BeautyPro's Under Eye Treatment worth getting? I gave it a solid test run to find out.
Updated on: September 16, 2025
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This is not a paid or sponsored review. All opinions are the author's own. Individual experience can vary. If you click on links we provide, we may receive compensation.

Introduction

BeautyPro might not sit on the same celebrity pedestal as some legacy giants, yet insiders know it for turning out smart and surprisingly sophisticated skincare in tidy little steps. The brand is celebrated for marrying no-nonsense formulas with that satisfying spa-at-home feel, so when its latest creation landed on my desk I was more than a little intrigued.

Eye Therapy Under Eye Mask is a name that sounds half-doctor, half-day-spa and the company promises a trifecta of cooling, moisturising and soothing benefits. The short pitch is simple: slip on the hydrogel patches, wait twenty minutes and watch puffiness, dryness and general late-night regret fade from view. Powered by a cocktail of collagen, green tea and vitamins A and E, the mask claims to refresh the delicate eye zone while lending it a smoother more rested look.

To see whether those promises translate from press release to real life I spent a full two weeks working these patches into my morning and evening routines, taking notes on texture, comfort, immediate glow and any longer-term changes. Consider this the candid download on whether Eye Therapy lives up to its soothing moniker and whether it deserves a spot in your skincare rotation.

What is Eye Therapy Under Eye Mask?

Eye Therapy Under Eye Mask sits in the under eye treatment category, a corner of skincare that focuses on targeting concerns like puffiness, dryness and visible fatigue in the thin skin that frames the eyes. These treatments are typically formulated to deliver a concentrated hit of hydration and soothing ingredients in a short window of wear time, making them popular for quick pick-me-ups or as a finishing touch to a more leisurely routine.

In practical terms BeautyPro’s version is a set of hydrogel patches infused with a water based serum that aims to cool, moisturise and calm. The formula leans on collagen to help the skin hold on to water, green tea to provide an antioxidant buffer against everyday stressors and vitamins A and E to support texture and softness. Aloe vera rounds out the blend with its familiar calming effect, especially useful when the eye area looks tired or feels tight.

Unlike leave-on creams or traditional sheet masks this treatment is meant to sit under the eyes for a focused twenty-minute session, after which any excess serum can be tapped in like a regular eye product. The idea is straightforward: a short application window, no rinsing and results that should be visible right after removal, with gradual benefits accruing over repeat uses.

Did it work?

In the name of rigorous skincare journalism I benched my usual eye cream for three full days before starting the test, which felt very scientific given my bathroom is hardly a lab. Fourteen days seemed like a fair stretch to see whether these little half moons could do more than offer a fleeting chill.

I used the patches first thing every other morning and again on alternate nights, sticking to the suggested twenty minute window. Day one delivered exactly what the brand promised: an instant hit of coolness that took the edge off post coffee puffiness and left the skin feeling soft and slightly glossy. The effect, while pleasant, faded within an hour or two and by lunchtime my eyes looked more or less like their usual sleep deprived selves.

By the midway point, around day seven, there was a modest shift. The very light crepe texture I usually see under my left eye looked less pronounced for most of the morning and concealer sat a bit more smoothly. Puffiness still returned after a long screen session but it deflated faster than usual, suggesting the green tea was pulling some weight. What did not change was the shadowy tint that passes for my hereditary dark circles. The masks do not claim to brighten but it is worth noting if you are hoping for an all in one miracle.

On the final day I compared before and after photos taken in identical lighting. Hydration definitely improved; the skin reflected light better and those fine dehydration lines were softer. Firmness and elasticity, the supposed collagen payoff, felt largely unchanged. In short the masks delivered a temporary moisture surge and a short lived de-puff but no cumulative transformation.

So did they work? Partly. They tick the boxes for cooling and soothing and they are a nice quick fix before an early meeting or a late dinner. Still, the benefits are fleeting and, at least for my eye zone, not compelling enough to replace my regular treatment. I will keep a pair on standby for travel or after a red-eye flight but they will not earn permanent residency on my bathroom shelf.

Main ingredients explained

Front and center is hydrolyzed collagen, the protein that gives skin its bounce. BeautyPro appears to use a marine-derived version, so while pescatarians can breathe easy strict vegans and vegetarians will want to skip it. Collagen molecules are chopped into smaller fragments here, which helps them sit on the surface and lock in water rather than penetrate deeply. The plumping you see after removal is mostly this moisture-binding film doing its job.

Green tea extract (Camellia sinensis) comes in next with a payload of catechin antioxidants. These help neutralize free-radical damage from blue light and pollution, which may explain why my screen-related puffiness settled more quickly during testing. It also has mild vasoconstrictive properties that can temporarily tighten the look of swollen capillaries around the eye.

Vitamin A shows up as retinyl palmitate, the gentlest member of the retinoid family. It supports cell turnover, making fine dehydration lines look softer over time. That said, any retinoid can be a gray zone during pregnancy so consult your doctor before using if you are expecting or breastfeeding. Vitamin E (tocopheryl acetate and tocopherol) rounds out the antioxidant duo, reinforcing the skin barrier and cushioning the delicate area against transepidermal water loss.

Aloe vera powder adds a soothing, anti-inflammatory layer that feels especially good after a late night, while glycerin and sorbitol work as classic humectants to draw water into the upper layers of skin. If you are scanning for potential pore-blockers, castor seed oil and octyldodecanol rate modestly comedogenic (meaning they can clog pores when left on oily areas) but given the thin, low-sebum skin under the eyes they are unlikely to cause breakouts for most users.

The formula is preserved with phenoxyethanol and 1,2-hexanediol, both widely accepted in cosmetic safety circles, though extremely sensitive skin types may prefer to patch test first. A light fragrance is present along with mineral pigments for the pearly tint; neither bothered my eyes, but those with fragrance allergies should be aware.

All told the ingredient list skews more spa treat than hardcore treatment. It is not vegan, it is conditionally pregnancy-safe with medical sign-off and it contains a couple of mildly comedogenic emollients, yet the balance of humectants, antioxidants and soothing agents makes for a solid quick-fix cocktail when your under eyes are crying out for a cold compress and a glass of water.

What I liked/didn’t like

Here is a snapshot of the highs and the hesitations after two weeks of use.

What works well:

  • Instant cooling kick that settles morning puffiness within minutes
  • Noticeable hydration boost that makes concealer glide on without catching in fine lines
  • Hydrogel texture stays put so you can move around and the light fragrance did not irritate my sensitive eyes

What to consider:

  • Effects last only a few hours so you need repeat applications for sustained payoff
  • Single use format means the cost per session can add up if you rely on them daily
  • Contains marine collagen and retinyl palmitate which may not suit vegans or those avoiding retinoids during pregnancy

My final thoughts

Eye Therapy Under Eye Mask sits comfortably in the “nicely refreshing but not life altering” category. After two weeks of faithful use I would peg the experience at a solid 7.5/10. The masks cooled, hydrated and took the edge off puffiness but the improvements were short lived and did not stack up to a lasting transformation. If you thrive on quick pick-me-ups before a meeting or flight you will enjoy them. If you are hunting for a treatment that chips away at long-standing texture issues or genetic shadows this will only scratch the surface.

Comparing it with a small mountain of other eye treatments I have rotated through, I would say BeautyPro’s patches earn a recommendation for anyone who wants fuss-free relief, has minimal time and values that spa-like chill. They will not wow ingredient purists looking for high-dose actives or anyone on a vegan or retinoid-avoidant regimen. As for whether I would pass one to a friend: yes, but with the caveat that they treat it like an occasional perk rather than the cornerstone of their routine.

If your wish list leans more toward brightening or longer wear benefits there are a few tried-and-tested alternatives worth noting. Deascal’s Dark Circle Cream is an excellent all-rounder that gently lifts overall tone and costs less than you might expect for the performance. Goodal’s Green Tangerine Vita C Dark Circle Eye Cream layers a punchy vitamin C derivative with soothing peptides and has helped me keep post-vacation dullness at bay. StriVectin’s Super-C Dark Circle Brightening Eye Serum delivers a silkier finish, doubles as a primer and kept my concealer crease-free through a twelve-hour shoot. Each of these covers ground that BeautyPro only lightly treads so match the choice to your primary concern.

Before you tear open any new eye product please patch test behind the ear or along the jawline and give it 24 hours—sorry to sound like the over-protective parent but sensitive eye skin is not forgiving. Remember too that hydration boosts are temporary; consistent use and realistic expectations are the real secret to brighter mornings.

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