
Sold largely to middle aged women, Caracol Cream touts themselves to defeat even the deepest of wrinkles and even has a 60 day money back guarantee. They claim to have received the “American Anti-Aging Association Gold Award” in 2007. But we are doubtful of this being something other than their company. They also offer a 14 day trial for “qualified” individuals, but truthfully everybody qualifies. It just means you get signed up for a hard to cancel auto ship program. They actually don’t even have the decency to disclose the real price on their FAQ’s or in their terms of service or in the fine print when you are ordering your “14 day free trial.” Some have also reported that they could not actually return their product.
Price: $59.00
Primary ingredients, though you won’t find this on their site, include allantoin, collagen, elastin, glycolic acid, anti biotic peptides, vitamins, and natural solar filtrate, all of which they claim to fight wrinkles directly, by either working as collagen or promoting its growth.
The truth is that allantoin is nothing more than a moisturizer. Collagen and elastin are valuable, but don’t promote future peptides. And the rest are extremely questionable, because they don’t provide specifics, just general groupings. They claim that these ingredients will attack wrinkles and bags, but in truth, most of them have no true application and only feed the man, they don’t teach the man how to fish.
Caracol Cream is similar to quite a few boasting products on the market that have no actual basis in reality. They use a free trial offer to lure you in for a reason as well as annoying pop ups that make it difficult to navigate away from the site. There are plenty of customer complaints and no real disclosure. Caracol Cream is extremely frustrating to both us and former customers. It would be vastly appreciated if they would tell customers what they are actually getting themselves into, even in fine print.