A woman gliding a Peachly dermaplane razor along her cheek for smooth skin
Peachly · At-home dermaplaning · Reusable

Dermaplane Razor for Smoother Skin and Softer Makeup

★ 4.9 · 59 verified reviews

A gentle facial razor for dermaplaning at home. It lifts away soft peach fuzz and dull, dead skin in minutes, so serums sink in and makeup glides on. Reusable, travel-friendly, and just as handy for shaping your brows.

$19.99 $29.99 Save $10.00

Choose your pack

Multipacks arrive in assorted colors — no color to pick. The electric tool is a single rechargeable device.

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Reusable stainless razors, assorted colors in every multipack One tool for facial peach fuzz and neatly defined brows Gentle physical exfoliation for instantly smoother-looking skin
A set of Peachly dermaplane razors in assorted colors laid out on a soft surface
What it does

What at-home dermaplaning actually is

Dermaplaning is gentle physical exfoliation. You hold a fine single-blade facial razor at about a 45-degree angle against clean, dry skin and glide it in short, light strokes. It sweeps away soft peach fuzz and the layer of dull, dead cells on the surface, leaving skin that looks instantly smoother and brighter.

The idea is simple, and that is the appeal. There is no heat, no wax, no numbing, and nothing that stays on your skin afterward. You are lifting away two things at once: the fine vellus hair people call peach fuzz, and the dry, flaky cells that build up on the very top layer of your skin and make it look tired. Take those away and light bounces off your face differently — makeup readers call it that fresh, soft-focus finish.

Because a Peachly razor is reusable and lives in your own bathroom, it turns a treatment people used to book at a salon into a five-minute step you can do whenever your skin needs a reset. If you are brand new to it, start with our walk-through on how to dermaplane at home, then read up on the wider benefits of dermaplaning so you know what to expect.

Using a Peachly razor to tidy and define the shape of an eyebrow
Brows too

Brows, tidied and defined in seconds

The same razor doubles as a brow tool. Its compact blade lets you clean up stray hairs and sharpen the line under and around your brows with real precision. Small, careful strokes in good light give you a neat, groomed shape between appointments — no tweezing marathon and no trip to a brow bar required.

This is quietly one of the most loved uses among buyers. A lot of people keep one razor from their pack purely for brows, so the blade stays crisp for detail work. You get control that tweezers cannot match for tidying the fuzz along the brow bone, and unlike threading there is no waiting for hair to grow to a certain length first.

If brow shaping is your main reason to buy, the same tool is featured on our eyebrow razor page, and women shopping specifically for a gentle everyday facial groomer can compare notes on our facial razor for women page.

Peachly dermaplane razors styled beside makeup on a soft peach surface
Makeup upgrade

Makeup that sits smoother, not caked

When peach fuzz and dead skin are gone, foundation has a flat, even canvas to grip. Instead of catching on tiny hairs or clinging to dry patches, it blends down smoothly and looks more like skin. Many people find they need a little less product, and that their base lasts better through the day.

It is a small change that photographs well. Fine facial hair is one of the reasons foundation can look fuzzy or textured up close, especially under bright light or a camera flash. Clearing it, along with the flaky surface cells, is why so many makeup artists dermaplane a client before a big event. You can do the same at home the morning of, or the night before.

A quick note on timing: apply your usual skincare after you dermaplane, not before, so the blade glides on bare skin. We break down the full routine, including what to put on afterward, in our guide to the real benefits of dermaplaning.

Peachly rechargeable electric dermaplane tool being used along the jaw
Or go powered

Prefer a powered tool? There is an electric option

If you like the idea of dermaplaning but want something quicker to hold, the Peachly electric dermaplane tool is a single rechargeable device with a powered head. It removes the same peach fuzz and dead skin as the manual razors, and some people find the motion easier on the wrist for larger areas like the cheeks.

It is not better or worse than the manual packs — it is a different feel, and it is the honest answer to a question we get constantly. Manual razors win on control, cost, and the simple habit of rotating to a fresh blade. The electric tool wins on speed and grip. Neither one removes hair for good; both simply exfoliate the surface, and the fine fuzz grows back as normal.

See the full rundown, including how to charge and clean it, on the electric dermaplane tool page. If you are weighing dermaplaning against your normal razor, our dermaplane vs. shaving comparison lays out the differences plainly.

By the numbers

Peachly, in three honest figures

We would rather show you numbers we can actually stand behind than borrow a stat from someone else. These three come straight from our own product and buyer data — the rating our customers left, what is in every multipack, and the guarantee on every order.

4.9 / 5

Average rating from 59 verified Peachly buyers who left a review

— Peachly verified reviews, 2026

6 colors

Assorted shades in every multipack, so each razor is easy to tell apart

— Peachly product spec, 2026

30 days

Money-back window on every order, returns by mail with no restocking fee

— Peachly returns policy, 2026

Which one is right for you

Maya's pick, after testing the range

I have run the manual packs and the electric tool through the same weekly routine on my own skin, and the truth is there is no single "best" — there is a best for you. Here is how I would steer a friend, based on how often you will use it, whether you want to share, and how much control you like. Prices and savings are the live figures from the buy box above.

OptionBest forWhat you getPrice
10-PackFirst-timers & giftingTen reusable razors, assorted colors — enough to try it and share$19.99 $29.99
30-Pack Best valueRegular weekly usersOur most popular set — a fresh blade whenever one dulls, all year$34.99 $49.99
40-PackHouseholds & sharersThe lowest cost per razor — stock up for the whole family$39.99 $59.99
Electric ToolSpeed & easy gripOne rechargeable device with a powered head, no blades to rotate$69.99 $99.99

My own default is the 30-Pack: it is the sweet spot between price per razor and always having a crisp blade on hand. For a deeper, criteria-by-criteria breakdown, see our honest guide to the best dermaplane razor.

Simple routine

How to dermaplane in 4 steps

Dermaplaning at home takes about five minutes. Cleanse and dry your skin, hold the blade at roughly 45 degrees, work in short downward strokes across one small section at a time, then rinse and moisturize. Always work on bare, dry, healthy skin — never over active acne, moles, or broken skin.

  1. 1

    Start clean and completely dry

    Wash your face and pat it fully dry. Dermaplane on bare skin with nothing on it — no oils, serums, or cleanser residue — so the blade glides instead of dragging. Damp or slippery skin is where nicks happen.

  2. 2

    Hold the blade at about 45 degrees

    Pull your skin taut with your free hand. Angle the razor at roughly 45 degrees and use short, light, downward strokes. Let the blade do the work — pressing harder does not remove more, it just risks irritation.

  3. 3

    Work in small sections

    Move through the cheeks, jaw, upper lip, and forehead one area at a time, then switch to feather-light touch-ups along the brows. Skip anything raised, red, or breaking out. Wipe the blade on a tissue as you go.

  4. 4

    Soothe, protect, and store dry

    Rinse, pat dry, and follow with a gentle hydrating serum or moisturizer — freshly exfoliated skin drinks it in. Wear SPF during the day. Rinse the razor, let it dry fully, and rotate to a new one when the blade feels less crisp.

New to it or unsure whether it is right for your skin? Read our plain-language take on whether dermaplaning is safe and the step-by-step on how to use a dermaplane razor before your first pass.

Buying guide & care

Buying guide: how to choose your Peachly set

Choosing between the packs really comes down to three questions: how often will you dermaplane, are you buying just for yourself or to share, and do you want manual control or a powered device?

If you are curious but haven't tried dermaplaning yet, the 10-Pack is the low-risk way in. Ten reusable razors give you plenty of runway to find your rhythm, and because they come in assorted colors it is easy to keep one aside for brows and hand the rest around the house. If you already know you'll make this a weekly habit, the 30-Pack is the one most people land on — it works out cheaper per razor and means you always have a fresh blade the moment one starts to tug. The 40-Pack is the best value per razor overall and makes sense for households where more than one person is dermaplaning, or if you simply like to stock up once and forget about it.

The electric dermaplane tool is a different decision entirely. It is a single rechargeable device rather than a set of blades, so you are paying for the motor and the grip, not quantity. Reach for it if you find holding a manual razor fiddly, or if you want to cover larger areas like the cheeks quickly. It removes the same peach fuzz and dead skin — the difference is feel, not results.

Whatever you pick, the fundamentals stay the same: gentle, reusable exfoliation you control, backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee. Still torn? Our best dermaplane razor guide scores each option against clear criteria, and the reviews page shows what real buyers say about each one.

How to use and care for your razors

Getting the most out of your razors is mostly about a few good habits. Always dermaplane on clean, dry, healthy skin, holding the blade at roughly 45 degrees and using short, light strokes. Never bear down, and never drag the blade over active acne, moles, cold sores, or any skin that is irritated, sunburned, or broken.

Frequency: once a week to once every ten days suits most skin. Going more often does not speed up results and can leave skin feeling tight, so give it time to recover between sessions.

Cleaning: rinse the blade under warm water after every use to clear away hair and dead skin, then let it air-dry completely before you cap or store it. Storing a wet blade is the fastest way to dull it. Keep razors somewhere dry rather than sitting in a steamy shower.

Blade life: a stainless blade stays crisp for a good while, but it will eventually feel less sharp or start to pull. That is your cue to retire it and open a fresh razor from the pack — which is exactly why they come in multipacks. For the electric tool, follow the on-device instructions for charging and for swapping the head.

Aftercare: follow each session with a gentle, fragrance-light moisturizer or hydrating serum, and use SPF during the day since freshly exfoliated skin is more exposed. If you ever feel stinging or see lasting redness, pause and let your skin settle. For more on safe technique, see is dermaplaning safe.

What buyers report

Rated 4.9 / 5 across 59 verified buyers

A few words and photos shared by verified Peachly buyers. See more on our reviews page.

Peachly dermaplane razors shared by verified buyer Ashley R.
★★★★☆

"Really good !"

— Ashley R., verified buyer

Peachly dermaplane razors shared by verified buyer Jessica M.
★★★★★

"does it’s job, doesn’t feel dull"

— Jessica M., verified buyer

Peachly dermaplane razors shared by verified buyer Brianna T.
★★★★★

"gave more than what was in the picture!"

— Brianna T., verified buyer

Verified reviews.

FAQ

Dermaplaning questions, answered

What is a dermaplane razor and how does it work?

A dermaplane razor is a fine, single-blade facial razor with a safety guard. Held at about a 45-degree angle on clean, dry skin, it glides in short strokes to sweep away soft peach fuzz and the dull, dead cells resting on the surface. That gentle physical exfoliation leaves skin looking instantly smoother and helps skincare and makeup sit more evenly.

Does dermaplaning make facial hair grow back thicker or darker?

No. The fine vellus hair on your face grows back the same way it was before — it does not turn coarse, thick, or dark because you removed it. It can feel a little more noticeable at first simply because the tip is blunt rather than tapered, but the color and texture do not change.

How often should I dermaplane at home?

For most people, once a week to once every ten days is plenty. Your skin needs a little time to rebuild its surface between sessions, so more frequent passing can leave it feeling tight or sensitive. Listen to your skin: if it looks red or feels raw, wait longer before the next pass.

Does dermaplaning hurt?

Used correctly it should not hurt. On clean, dry skin, with light pressure and the blade held at a shallow angle, you feel a soft scraping sensation, not a cut. Nicks usually come from pressing too hard, going too fast, or working over a raised spot. Slow, short strokes keep it comfortable.

Can I use it on active acne or breakouts?

No. Skip any area with active acne, pimples, cold sores, moles, or skin that is irritated, sunburned, or broken. Dragging a blade over inflamed skin can spread bacteria and make things worse. Work only over calm, healthy skin, and pause dermaplaning entirely while a breakout settles.

Are Peachly razors reusable?

Yes. Each stainless razor is built to be reused, not thrown out after one pass. Rinse and dry it after every session and it will stay crisp for a good while. When a blade starts to feel less sharp or begins to tug, retire it and open a fresh one from your multipack — that is exactly why they come in sets.

What is the difference between the multipacks and the electric tool?

The manual multipacks give you the most control and the lightest touch, and you simply rotate to a fresh razor when one dulls. The electric dermaplane tool is a single rechargeable device with a powered head that some people find quicker and easier to hold. Both remove peach fuzz and dead skin — it comes down to the feel you prefer.

Can I shape my eyebrows with a dermaplane razor?

Yes, and it is one of the most popular uses. The compact blade lets you tidy stray hairs and clean up the line under and around your brows with real precision. Use tiny, careful strokes and check your work in good light. Many buyers keep one razor just for brow detailing.

When will my order arrive?

Orders are dispatched within 1-2 business days and typically arrive within 8-10 business days, with free US shipping on every order. You will get tracking as soon as your parcel is on its way. Delivery windows can vary a little during busy periods, but 8-10 business days is the standard estimate.

What is your return policy?

Every order is covered by a 30-day money-back guarantee. If your razors are not right for you, reach out through our contact page within 30 days of delivery and we will make it right. Returns are by mail and we do not charge a restocking fee.

Smoother skin is a five-minute habit away

Reusable Peachly dermaplane razors from $19.99. Free US shipping, dispatched in 1-2 business days, and backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Choose your pack →

For external cosmetic use on clean, dry skin only. Hold the blade at roughly 45 degrees, use light strokes, and avoid active acne, moles, and irritated or broken skin. Peachly razors are grooming and exfoliation tools, not a medical or dermatological treatment. If you have a skin condition or any doubt, check with a professional first.

Who wrote this

The at-home glow, without the salon price

Dermaplaning used to be something you booked and paid for. A reusable razor and five minutes at your own sink change that. Do it once a week on calm, clean skin and you get the same smooth, makeup-ready finish on your own schedule — for the price of a single facial, spread across a whole pack.

Everything on this page reflects hands-on use, not a spec sheet. If you want to see exactly how we put facial razors through their paces before recommending them, read how we test. And if you are still deciding, our guides on the benefits of dermaplaning, dermaplane vs. shaving, and how to dermaplane at home cover the rest.

Woman with smooth, fresh-looking skin after at-home dermaplaning