The Silicone Scar Stick

The Silicone Scar Stick

$29.00
Sale price  $29.00 Regular price 
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The Silicone Scar Stick
4.9 · 7541 reviews

The Silicone Scar Stick

The clinical gold standard for healing scars, in a ten-second daily swipe.

  • Flattens and softens raised, healing scars
  • Fades redness and dark marks over 8 to 12 weeks
  • Dries invisible. Wears under clothes and makeup.
  • No sheets to peel. No gels to wipe off.
  • Medical grade silicone
  • 10 seconds a day
  • Invisible when dry
  • Safe for all skin tones
The silicone sheets my cousin gave me fell off in the shower and rolled up under my leggings, so I quit in a week. This is one swipe and 10 seconds, so I actually kept it up. Week 9 and my scar is flatter and the redness has calmed way down.
Rachel M. · Verified · C-section, 5 months postpartum
What's inside and why it works

Medical grade silicone. That is the whole formula, and that is the point. It is the same material surgeons and burn units have trusted for over 30 years, and it is the only topical with real clinical backing for scars.

It does not soak in, and it is not a drug. One swipe dries into a thin, breathable, invisible film that sits over the scar and holds moisture in. A scar that stays hydrated stops overbuilding the thick, raised, red tissue that makes it stand out. So over time it settles flatter, softer, and closer to your skin tone.

Breathable and non comedogenic, so it will not clog the skin around the scar. Fragrance free. No needles, no laser, no bleaching. Made for cesarean, surgery, keloid prone, and old or new scars alike.

How to use

Use it once or twice a day on clean, closed, fully healed skin. Never on an open wound or fresh stitches.

  1. Clean and dry. Pat the area fully dry so the film can form.
  2. Swipe once. A thin layer straight over the scar. It dries invisible in under a minute.
  3. Get dressed. It wears under clothes and makeup all day. Reapply after showering or a heavy sweat.

When to start: once the wound is fully closed and any scabbing is gone, usually around 3 to 6 weeks, and after a cesarean typically at your 6 week clearance. When in doubt, ask your OB or surgeon. They will know silicone as standard scar care.

How long: consistency is the whole game. Most scars need daily use across the full 8 to 12 week healing window, which is why most people start with 2 sticks. You will not see much in week 1. Itching and tightness ease first, redness calms and flattening begins around weeks 4 to 8, and the change most people actually notice shows by week 12. Older scars take the longer end.

Shipping and returns

Ships within 1 business day, with tracking on every order. Free US shipping on 2 sticks or more. Most orders arrive in 6 to 12 business days.

Because scars take time, the guarantee covers the whole healing window. Use it daily, and if you do not see a visible change by week 8, email us within 60 days of delivery and we refund every cent.

Medical grade silicone 10 seconds a day Invisible when dry 60 day guarantee Safe for all skin tones
One swipe over the scar, dries invisible, dressed

The whole routine

Ten seconds.
Once a day.

No sheets to cut and tape. No gel to wait on. Swipe it over clean, closed skin, let it dry invisible, get dressed. It works under clothes and makeup all day.

No sheets to cut and tape. No gel to wait on. Swipe, let it dry invisible, get dressed.

The window

A healing scar is still deciding how it will settle. For about twelve weeks, you get a say.

The same scar in the same light at week 1, 4, 8 and 12
  1. Weeks 1 to 2

    Itching and tightness ease as the silicone barrier holds moisture at the scar.

  2. Weeks 4 to 8

    Redness calms and raised tissue begins to flatten as collagen production normalizes.

  3. Week 12

    The scar settles flatter, softer and closer to your skin tone, and stays that way.

The science

It doesn't soak in.
That's the point.

Silicone has been the gold standard in hospital burn units for over thirty years. It isn't a cream and it doesn't deliver a drug. It changes the environment the scar heals in.

How silicone works on a scar: barrier forms, moisture is held at the scar, collagen settles flat
  1. 1

    It seals

    One swipe dries into a thin, flexible, breathable film. A second skin over the scar.

  2. 2

    It hydrates

    The film stops water escaping, holding moisture at the scar. The state healthy skin heals in.

  3. 3

    It calms the overbuild

    Hydrated skin signals the scar to slow the extra collagen that makes scars raised, red and rough.

Scars that settled

★★★★★ 4.9 average · 7541 reviews

Customer C-section scar result
The silicone sheets my cousin gave me fell off in the shower and rolled up under my leggings, so I quit in a week. This is one swipe and 10 seconds, so I actually kept it up. Week 9 and my scar is flatter and the redness has calmed way down.
Rachel M. · C-section, 5 months postpartum
Customer chest keloid result
Every label I have ever read is for flat scars. This is the first one that even talks about skin like mine. I have a chest keloid from a single ingrown hair years ago and I was terrified anything would make it worse. It is softer now, flatter at the edges, and it finally stopped itching.
Denise W. · Keloid-prone
Customer shoulder surgery scar result
My surgeon said use silicone and walked out. Did not say which one, did not say how. I stood in a pharmacy aisle staring at forty options. This was the easy answer, one swipe after I brush my teeth. Ten weeks in my physio asked what I had been doing to it.
Tom H. · Shoulder surgery
As someone with darker skin, laser genuinely scared me. One wrong setting and I trade a mark for a burn. I wanted something that was not a gamble. The dark spot on my jaw has faded so much by week 8 and I never had to risk anything to get here.
Aisha K. · Post-injury mark
Customer mole removal scar result
The gel I tried before wiped off on every waistband I own, so I stopped bothering within a week. This dries in seconds and just stays put. That sounds small but it is the whole thing. It is the difference between owning a treatment and actually using one.
Meg S. · Mole removal
Mine is three years old so I honestly expected nothing. It is slower than a fresh one, I will say that. But by week 12 it is noticeably softer and lighter, and the thing I did not expect is that I stopped checking for it in every mirror I pass.
Priya D. · Older scar

Mend vs. the medicine cabinet

Mend Sheets Gels Onion
Medical grade silicone occlusion
10 second, one step application
Stays put under clothes and makeup
Works on curves: ears, jaw, joints, belly
Clinically supported mechanism
Full 8 to 12 week course $44 $70+ $60+ $35

Questions, answered honestly

Is this just another scar product that won't work?

Fair question, because most of them don't. Bio oil, vitamin E, onion creams, none of them have real evidence behind them, and if you've wasted money on those, your skepticism is earned. Silicone is the one exception. It's what burn units and surgeons have used for decades, and it's the only topical with actual clinical backing. We're not asking you to believe us. We're asking you to try it, and the guarantee means if it does nothing for you, you pay nothing.

Could it make my scar worse?

No. This is the opposite of the aggressive route. There are no needles, no acid, no heat, nothing that can inflame a scar or trigger a keloid to grow. Silicone just sits on the surface as a breathable film and holds moisture in. It's the gentlest option there is, which is exactly why it's recommended first, before anyone talks about injections or laser. If your skin scars raised and you're scared of doing the wrong thing, this is the safe place to start.

Is it safe for keloid-prone or darker skin?

Yes, and this is who it's built for. Laser and some peels carry a real risk of burns or dark marks on deeper skin tones, which is why so many people are right to be afraid of them. Silicone carries none of that risk. It doesn't bleach, it doesn't burn, it doesn't react with melanin. It's a physical barrier, nothing more, so it's safe across every skin tone and it's first-line care specifically for raised and keloid-prone skin.

When can I start after surgery or a C-section?

Once the wound is fully closed and any scabbing is gone. For most people that's around the 3 to 6 week mark, and after a C-section it's usually your 6 week clearance. Never on open or broken skin. If you're not sure yours has closed, ask your OB or surgeon. They'll know silicone as standard scar care.

Will it work on a scar that's years old?

Yes, just slower than a fresh one. Skin keeps renewing for life, so an old scar can still soften and fade, it simply needs the longer end of the window, usually 12 weeks or more of daily use, which is why the 3 stick option exists. A fresh scar responds fastest, so if yours is recent, the best time to start is now.

Is it safe while breastfeeding?

Silicone doesn't absorb into the skin or enter the bloodstream. It sits on the surface as a breathable film, and you apply it only to the scar, not anywhere near the chest. As with anything postpartum, run it past your OB if you'd like the extra peace of mind, but there's nothing in it that gets into your system.

Will it break me out?

No. Medical grade silicone is non comedogenic, and the film is breathable, so it holds moisture in without suffocating the skin. Apply it to the scar itself rather than smearing it across the surrounding area and you won't have an issue.

When will I actually see a change?

Honestly, not in week one, and anyone promising that is lying to you. The itching and tightness ease first, in the first couple of weeks. Redness starts to calm and the raised feel starts to flatten around weeks 4 to 8. The change you can actually see in the mirror shows up around week 12. It's a slow burn, not a magic trick, which is why we guarantee it by the week instead of overpromising by the day.

What if it doesn't work for me?

Then you get your money back, all of it. Use it daily, and if you don't see a visible change by week 8, email us and we refund every cent. No photos to send, no scar to prove, no back and forth. Scars take time and the risk of that time is ours to carry, not yours.