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Redensyl

A plant-derived hair complex marketed to wake up stem cells in the follicle—often compared to minoxidil in brand copy.

Redensyl illustration
Reading ingredients on a skincare label

Spotted this on a label?

Redensyl

That’s the INCI name—the official way it appears on the back of your serum or cream. Same ingredient, different marketing names.

Structure (cute edition)

Simplified amino acid chain for Redensyl

This peptide is a short chain of about 4 amino acids—think of it as a tiny protein necklace on your label.

INCI: Redensyl · ~4 amino acids in our simplified view

What brands say it does

Redensyl is a blend of dihydroquercetin-glucoside, EGCG glucoside, glycine, and zinc—not a single peptide, but peptide-adjacent and widely grouped with peptide hair actives. Brands claim it targets follicle stem cells for thicker-looking hair over 3–6 months.

Where you’ll find it

Leave-in scalp treatments, hair serums, and anti-thinning tonics—often alongside capixyl or procapil.

Other names you might see

Dihydroquercetin-glucoside Epigallocatechin gallate glucoside Glycine Zinc chloride

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Educational only—not medical advice. Hair loss has many causes; see a dermatologist or trichologist for persistent thinning.