The Best Blue Lagoon Skincare Masks Review: All Four Tested

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Last Updated on March 29, 2026 by omgbart

Iceland has been on my wish list for as long as I can remember. The Blue Lagoon specifically. I haven’t made it there yet but the brand has made it to my bathroom shelf more than once. Before the masks arrived, I had already experienced their world in a different way — a previous mailer included the hotel restaurant’s loose tea and their lava salt. That kind of brand coherence is rare and it told me everything I needed to know about how seriously they take their provenance story.

Multi masking back to back with Blue Lagoon skincare.
Back-to-back masking with Black Lava + Algae = after photo of my purified and glowing skin 🙂

What is Blue Lagoon Skin Science About?

Blue Lagoon skincare is built around ingredients exclusive to their geothermal ecosystem in Iceland: silica, seawater, lava, and patented microalgae. The formulas are straightforward and clean but elevated by innovative science that harnesses the purity of what the lagoon naturally produces. Nothing here feels manufactured for the sake of marketing.

Known for their BL+ Patented Bioactives, this fusion of ingredients is sourced from geothermal seawater and backed by over 30 years of scientific research. Each expertly crafted formula is meant to care for the skin barrier while spearheading its renewal process.

Blue Lagoon face mask textures up close, explained.

I could have started with the serum or the moisturizer. But committing to a new brand at the serum or moisturizer level requires a leap of faith most people aren’t ready to take. A mask is different. Low commitment, high payoff, and often instant results. As a self-proclaimed masking king, I can tell within an hour whether a formula is worth your time and money. These four are. Here’s why.

Using Blue Lagoon lava scrub mask on myself in three steps.

Lava Scrub Mask

This is my rewind button. Formulated to exfoliate and renew, this mask-scrub hybrid is all about taking the skin back to its smoothest and most luminous. Apply it to dry skin with damp fingers to activate gentle cell turnover via mild manual exfoliation. It’s a paste with a slight grit that never feels aggressive. You can rinse it off after massaging for a minute or two, or leave it on until it dries.

Blue Lagoon multi masking like a pro.

There is a faint pulling sensation but zero discomfort. It dries relatively quickly, turning lighter in color as it absorbs excess oil without compromising the skin barrier. Considering this mask is black, it rinses off surprisingly easily. Follow with a hydrator and moisturizer. Best used once a week. My skin feels glass-smooth every time.

$95 (2.5 oz) and $45 (1 oz)


Using Blue Lagoon algae mask on myself application process.

Algae Mask

This one makes an excellent follow-up to the Lava Scrub. That combination is a masking night-in recipe worth bookmarking. Super creamy, the luscious texture makes for a genuinely indulgent treatment. It purifies and deep cleanses but also delivers instant comfort and nourishment, which is not a combination you find often in a mud mask. You do not need a brush, but I love the ritual of applying it with one.

Blue Lagoon face masks explained.

Blue Lagoon tags this as a formula to nourish and enhance glow, and the description holds up. Infused with strengthening and rejuvenating microalgae, it fully revives dull skin in a single use. The formula is soft-drying, so it rinses off easily. The Algae Mask leaves skin feeling glowing and almost lifted. One of my favorites in the range.

$95 (2.5 oz) and $45 (1 oz)


Blue Lagoon silica mud mask application selfie.

Silica Mud Mask

Pro tip: shake the living daylights out of this one before opening the tube. The formula tends to separate, so shake vigorously until you reach the desired texture: a white, creamy lotion. Also, do yourself a favor and rinse it off in the shower. This Deep Cleanse and Strengthen formula can get messy. It is very mineral-rich and fast-drying, which means it may start to flake off in a thousand little white flecks. So don’t talk, drink, or frown. Walk straight into the shower 20 minutes after application.

Blue Lagoon Silica Mud Mask reviewed by skincare expert.

Since this is Blue Lagoon’s most silica-forward mask, it is one of the best pore purifiers I have come across. When my complexion feels congested and dull, this one delivers a refreshing weekly reset. Leave it on no longer than 10 to 15 minutes and moisturize immediately after rinsing.

$95 (2.5 oz) and $45 (1 oz)


Blue Lagoon mineral mask application process on myself.

Mineral Mask

This is the one Blue Lagoon calls Hydrate and Revitalize. It delivers on both. Built around bioactive geothermal seawater rich in electrolytes and minerals, the formula is rounded out with aloe, jojoba, allantoin, and hyaluronic acid. The gel-cream texture feels cooling on contact. It spreads beautifully and sinks in with just enough slip to make application feel like a moment.

Blue Lagoon mineral mask for dry skin.

It is best suited for when your complexion is stressed or compromised. It also doubles as an overnight mask when applied sparingly. Otherwise it may dry slightly tacky. One of the most effective masks in my rotation, it delivers calm, hydrated, and slightly smug skin every time.

$95 (2.5 oz) and $45 (1 oz)


There is a concept gaining traction in European beauty circles called agricosmetics. The idea is simple: ingredients grown or harvested in a specific place carry the integrity of that place into the formula. Beautiful Estate has been building around this premise with botanicals sourced from their own land in the south of France. Blue Lagoon is doing something similar, just with a geothermal ecosystem instead of a farm. The lagoon is the ingredient source, the quality control, and the brand story all at once.

Key to help with Blue Lagoon face mask tubes.

That kind of provenance is increasingly rare. Most luxury skincare borrows the language of place without the substance. Blue Lagoon does not have that problem. The silica, seawater, and microalgae are not imported or synthesized. They come from one specific body of water in Iceland and nowhere else.

Which brings me back to why these masks work as an entry point. Destination wellness is one of the fastest growing segments in luxury travel. People are flying to Iceland, Japan, and the Swiss Alps specifically for the restorative properties of the landscape. These masks are not a substitute for that experience. But they are the closest thing to bringing it home. The ritual, the texture, the results–it all carries a sense of place that most skincare simply cannot replicate.

If Iceland is still on your list, consider this a preview.

Explore the complete range at bluelagoon.com


Affiliate disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. I only recommend products I actually use and love. If you shop through these links, I may earn a small commission, which helps keep this site running.


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