Is The Viral Medicube Age-R Booster Pro Skincare Device Really Worth It?
This one lifting-and-sculpting device replaced eight others in my bathroom

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
The at-home skincare device market is crowded with overpriced gadgets that overpromise and underdeliver. The Medicube Age-R Booster Pro — a Korean "glass-skin tool" that recently landed in the US — is a rare exception, and the beauty world is paying attention.
According to Harper's Bazaar, New York dermatologist Dendy Engelman calls it one of her go-to at-home devices, citing its combination of electroporation, microcurrent, EMS, and red light therapy as a meaningful upgrade to how well your existing skincare actually performs. That multi-modal approach isn't marketing fluff — it's what sets this apart from single-function competitors. Esthetician Elizabeth Grace Hand of Ställe Studios adds that the device increases ingredient absorption by nearly 500 percent, which translates to clients maintaining their in-office results longer between appointments. Plumper, smoother, and closer to that coveted glassy finish — she's obsessed, and so are her clients.
What It Does (And How to Actually Use It)
The device runs four modes — Air Shot, Booster, Microcurrent, and Derma Shot — each paired with a different LED color and targeting a specific concern, from bacteria and acne to deep-set fine lines and facial muscle tone. Every mode maxes out at five minutes, so a full routine clocks in under ten. Crucially, there's no conductor gel required; any serum or cream with enough slip does the job, meaning it integrates into a routine you already have rather than complicating it. The digital display shows your current mode and intensity level (five options each), and it charges via iPhone cable — a small detail that actually matters for consistency. Battery life is reportedly strong enough to survive a two-week trip with daily use to spare. At $220, it sits at the same price point as single-function microcurrent devices, making the multi-tech package genuinely competitive.
The drawbacks are minor but real: the buttons sit close together, making accidental resets easy mid-treatment. And if you've recently had Botox or fillers, consult your dermatologist first — the technology can interfere with injectables as they settle. For everyone else, the learning curve is low and the payoff is fast.
In a category full of tools collecting dust, the Age-R Booster Pro is the rare device that earns its place on the bathroom shelf — because results you can see in a week tend to build habits that actually stick.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


