The Short Answer
Hyaluronic acid (HA) attracts water to the skin's surface. Beef tallow feeds the skin barrier and seals moisture in. For genuinely dry skin — especially dry skin that stays dry no matter how much serum you apply — tallow typically outperforms hyaluronic acid on its own. But you do not have to choose. Tallow works beautifully layered on top of HA: apply your serum first, tallow last. Together, they do more than either one alone.
What Is Hyaluronic Acid?
Hyaluronic acid is a naturally occurring polysaccharide found in human skin, joints, and eyes. In skincare, it is synthesised in a lab (typically via bacterial fermentation) and used as a humectant — a substance that attracts and binds water molecules. One gram of HA can hold up to six litres of water. It draws moisture from the environment (or from deeper skin layers) and holds it at the surface, temporarily plumping fine lines and giving skin a smoother, more hydrated appearance.
HA is water-soluble, lightweight, and works well under other products. It is non-comedogenic and suitable for most skin types, including acne-prone and sensitive skin. It does not, however, repair the skin barrier, deliver fat-soluble vitamins, or act as an emollient. On its own — particularly in low-humidity environments — it can actually draw moisture out of the deeper dermis rather than pulling it from the air, leaving skin drier than before.
What Is Beef Tallow?
Beef tallow is rendered fat from grass-fed cattle, used in skincare for its remarkable compatibility with human sebum. The fatty acid profile of tallow — rich in oleic acid, palmitic acid, and stearic acid — closely mirrors the skin's own lipid composition. This is why tallow absorbs efficiently without sitting on top of the skin and without clogging pores.
Beyond its fatty acid profile, tallow contains fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K in their natural, bioavailable forms. These vitamins play active roles in skin cell regeneration (vitamin A), anti-inflammatory response (vitamin D), antioxidant protection (vitamin E), and wound healing (vitamin K). No water-based serum can deliver these because fat-soluble vitamins are, by definition, not water-soluble.
At Nana Latta, we use only grass-fed beef tallow, cold-processed in Belgium. Grass-fed tallow has a higher concentration of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) and omega-3 fatty acids than grain-fed equivalents — both of which have documented anti-inflammatory properties relevant to eczema, rosacea, and chronically irritated skin.
The Core Difference: What Each One Actually Does
| Property | Hyaluronic Acid | Beef Tallow |
|---|---|---|
| Function | Humectant (draws water) | Emollient + occlusive (feeds + seals) |
| Water vs. oil | Water-soluble | Oil-based |
| Barrier repair | No | Yes — rebuilds the lipid layer |
| Fat-soluble vitamins | No | Yes — A, D, E, K |
| Pore-clogging risk | Very low | Very low (non-comedogenic) |
| Best for | Temporary plumping, layering under other products | Chronic dryness, barrier damage, long-term repair |
| Works in humidity? | Best in humid environments | Works in any climate |
When Hyaluronic Acid Falls Short
For many people, HA serums produce a pleasant immediate effect — the skin feels smoother and looks more hydrated. But the effect is temporary, and some users (particularly those with a compromised skin barrier) notice that their skin feels tight or dry again within hours of application, sometimes worse than before. This is the "HA paradox": without an occlusive layer on top, HA can accelerate trans-epidermal water loss in dry or cold climates by drawing water upward through damaged skin rather than retaining it.
HA also does not address the underlying cause of chronically dry skin, which in most cases is a compromised lipid barrier — not a lack of water. Applying more water to a barrier that cannot hold it is like pouring water into a bucket with holes in it. The holes need to be repaired first.
When Tallow Is the Better Choice
For chronically dry, flaky, or eczema-prone skin, tallow addresses the root cause rather than the symptom. By providing the lipids and fat-soluble vitamins the skin needs to maintain and repair its barrier, tallow produces effects that compound over time — the skin gradually needs less product, not more. Many customers who have spent years layering serums and creams report that their skin becomes more self-sufficient within weeks of switching to tallow.
Tallow is also particularly effective for:
- Perioral dermatitis and skin around the eyes and mouth
- Post-prescription skin (after retinoid or steroid use)
- Menopausal and post-pregnancy skin, where the lipid barrier changes significantly
- Children and babies with sensitive or reactive skin
- Anyone in a cold or dry climate where humectants alone underperform
Do You Have to Choose? How to Layer Tallow with Your Other Skincare
Here is something we tell every customer: you do not have to throw out your serum or your hyaluronic acid. Tallow works beautifully with everything else — you just need to apply it in the right order.
The rule is simple: lighter, water-based products go on first, tallow goes on last. Tallow is an occlusive — it forms a breathable seal over the skin. That seal locks in everything underneath it. So if you apply your HA serum first, let it absorb for a moment, then apply tallow on top, the tallow amplifies the effect of the serum rather than competing with it.
A simple layering routine that works well:
- Cleanse (water or oil cleanse)
- Apply any water-based serums, including hyaluronic acid — press gently into damp skin
- Apply a small amount of tallow butter as your final step — it seals everything in and adds the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K that water-based products cannot deliver
The result is better than using either product alone. Your serum stays active longer because tallow prevents trans-epidermal water loss. And your tallow goes further because it does not need to compensate for a stripped or dehydrated barrier.
This is actually why many of our customers with combination or oily skin who were afraid of tallow find it works for them — they keep their existing lighter products and add just a small amount of tallow as the final step. The skin calms, sebum production self-regulates, and the dreaded oiliness does not appear.
Bottom line: tallow versus hyaluronic acid is the wrong question. The better question is where tallow fits in your existing routine. For most people, the answer is: last.
Which Skin Type Benefits Most from Tallow?
Dry and very dry skin: Tallow is the clear winner here. It repairs the barrier, delivers vitamins, and provides long-lasting moisture that no serum alone can match. For very dry skin, we recommend our Tallow Face Butter morning and evening as the final step in your routine.
Sensitive and reactive skin: Tallow's anti-inflammatory properties and minimal ingredient list (no synthetics, no preservatives, no fragrance in our unscented range) make it well-suited for reactive skin. HA serums with multiple additives can sometimes irritate sensitive skin; tallow rarely does.
Combination and oily skin: This is where most people have doubts. But oily skin is often a sign of a compromised barrier trying to compensate — the skin overproduces oil because it cannot retain moisture. Tallow, applied in small amounts as the last step after lighter products, often helps regulate sebum production rather than increasing it.
Acne-prone skin: Tallow is non-comedogenic, meaning it does not block pores. Its CLA and vitamin A content may actually support skin renewal and reduce the conditions that lead to breakouts. HA is also non-comedogenic and generally safe for acne-prone skin, but it addresses the symptom (dryness from harsh acne treatments) rather than the barrier.
Normal skin: Both work well. For normal skin focused on prevention and long-term health, tallow provides nutritional support that HA cannot. For a quick, lightweight hydration boost before makeup, HA may be preferable as a standalone.
Our Recommended Products
If you are new to tallow skincare, the best starting point is our Tallow Butter Family Daisy — our most versatile face butter, suitable for all skin types, unscented, and formulated for everyday use.
For dry or very dry skin, the Tallow Face Bundle Trio — all three face butters at a better price, perfect for exploring the full range
- Tallow Butter Family Daisy — everyday unscented face butter, all skin types
- Tallow Face Bundle Trio — all three face butters at a better price, perfect for exploring the full range
Handmade in Belgium. Free shipping across Belgium on orders over €75 and across Europe on orders over €150.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is tallow better than hyaluronic acid for dry skin?
For chronically dry skin, tallow is typically more effective because it repairs the lipid barrier and delivers fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) that HA cannot provide. HA attracts water temporarily; tallow rebuilds the skin's ability to hold onto that water long-term. That said, they work even better together — HA serum underneath, tallow on top.
Can I use tallow if I already use a hyaluronic acid serum?
Yes — and you should. Apply your HA serum first (on damp skin), wait a moment for it to absorb, then apply tallow as your final step. The tallow seals in the serum and prevents the hydration from evaporating. The combination outperforms either product alone.
Will tallow clog my pores?
Grass-fed beef tallow is non-comedogenic — it does not block pores. Its fatty acid profile closely resembles human sebum, which means the skin absorbs it efficiently without buildup. Many people who assumed tallow would break them out are surprised to find the opposite: their skin becomes calmer and less congested.
Is tallow skincare sustainable?
Tallow is a byproduct of the meat industry — it would otherwise be discarded. Using it in skincare is one of the most resource-efficient choices you can make: no additional land, water, or energy is required to produce the raw material. At Nana Latta, we source from Belgian grass-fed farms and use cold-processing methods that require no synthetic additives.
Where can I buy Nana Latta tallow products?
Our full range is available at nanalatta-skincare.com with shipping across Europe, and at select physical stores — see our stores page for locations in Antwerp, Lochristi, and Kalken.
What is the best natural alternative to hyaluronic acid?
If you want a natural humectant, vegetable-derived glycerin is comparable to HA. But if you want a complete moisturising solution in one product, grass-fed beef tallow is arguably the best natural alternative — providing emollient, occlusive, and vitamin-delivery functions that HA alone cannot match.