The microneedling-inspired treatment that sold out in 3 months is back

Have you noticed how high-performance skincare has been drifting into territory that used to belong exclusively to dermatologists’ offices? Microneedling, laser resurfacing and injectables once required long-lead appointments, recovery time, and a tolerance for sharp objects.Now, a growing category of what industry insiders call “at-home aesthetics” is attempting to recreate those results without the needles, the clinic lighting or the massive invoice.One of the most talked-about entries into this space sold out in less than three months after its debut.When Dr.

Brandt Skincare’s Needles No More Dermal Micro-Points launched in September 2025, it quickly developed a niche following among shoppers chasing clinical-style results without the appointment calendar.By the time word spread beyond the early adopters, shelves were empty.The treatment returned this January, just in time for the latest landscape of skincare, which has grown more interested in procedural-level results at home.

Consumers aren’t just looking for creams anymore.They want formulas that are true treatments that are targeted, active and designed to deliver serious results.Dermal Micro-Points takes inspiration from microneedling: the in-office treatment known for stimulating collagen through controlled micro-injuries in the skin.

Instead of needles, this formula uses Microchannel Technology powered by naturally occurring sponge spicules.These microscopic structures create up to three million temporary microchannels in the epidermis within five minutes, helping ingredients travel deeper into the skin.Each pump contains hundreds of these dissolving micro-points.

As the product is massaged into clean, dry skin, the spicules gradually melt into the upper layers of the epidermis, delivering active ingredients precisely where expression lines and loss of elasticity typically appear.The result is a formula designed to stimulate microcirculation, activate the basement membrane and encourage coll...

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Publisher: New York Post

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