The Ordinary vs Typology — which brand is better?
We compare them two ways: head-to-head on every shelf they share, and as makers overall — standing, reputation and honesty across everything each builds.
…you want range and the safe default. It is in the mix and competes across 4 fields, so there's a fit for most needs.
- you want wider category coverage
- you want deeper dominance in its best field
…you care about its focus. It plays fewer fields (1) but is hard to beat where it does compete.
…the rest of the picture matters more — it doesn’t lead any single measure outright.
Full brand profile →How this is made
Built from what 4 AI models (ChatGPT · Claude · Gemini · Perplexity) recommend across the catalog, layered with company reviewer takes, press coverage, marketing-honesty checks and price positioning. The short answer and verdict are derived from where those signals diverge — not written by hand for either brand.
Independent — not a vendor, not advertising, not a paid review. How we score →
Who leads each category
The like-for-like view — where each brand competes, and who ranks higher in every field they share. The comparison only makes sense where they actually overlap.?
Head-to-head, category by category
The same two brands look completely different depending on what you’re buying. Pick a category to see who ranks higher on that shelf and the buyer questions where they go head-to-head.?
Overall standing
Step back from any single shelf. Across the whole catalog: the panel’s combined average rank, each model’s pick, how often each brand gets mentioned, and how their standing moved.?
What each is known for
The advantage tags AI models attach most to each brand’s products, sized by how often they come up — split into what’s distinctly each brand’s and what they share.?
In plain terms: The Ordinary is known for value, Typology for clean beauty. They overlap on affordable.
What critics say
Summarised from video reviews across each brand’s line — what they consistently praise, where they push back, with the press tone beneath.?
Reviewers praise
- Formulas are dense with active, evidence-backed ingredients — peptides, niacinamide, squalane — that reviewers consistently find effective
- The squalane cleanser is singled out across multiple channels as one of the gentler, more reliable cleansers on the market regardless of skin type
- Niacinamide 10% + Zinc 1% is praised as a genuine workhorse for acne, redness, and pigmentation without excessive sensitivity
Reviewers push back
- At least one reviewer argues the brand campaigns loudly against industry marketing hype while itself contributing to the culture of overconsumption and ingredient overload it critiques
- The mineral SPF offering is noted as a weak point — reviewers find it inadequate for acne-prone skin and suggest looking elsewhere
- Copper peptide and other complex serums are considered good but likely inferior in molecular delivery and formulation depth to sister brand NIOD's equivalent products
The Ordinary earns broad respect for ingredient-forward, no-nonsense formulations and a transparent scientific ethos, though reviewers question whether the brand fully lives up to the values it publicly preaches.
Where reviewers split on The Ordinary: Reviewers disagree on how The Ordinary's peptide serum stacks up against NIOD's: one sees the broader ingredient stack as an advantage, another questions whether a more focused, rigorously supported formula would outperform a product loaded with many peptides at onceOne reviewer praises the Periodic Fable campaign as clever and culturally important; the same reviewer also builds a sustained case that The Ordinary was the wrong brand to deliver that message, creating an internal tension other reviewers do not engage with
The Ordinary's skincare products dominate coverage with praise for affordable efficacy, while most other mentions are unrelated articles using "ordinary" as a generic term.
Can you trust their marketing
Honesty is a brand-character trait — it doesn’t matter which category a brand overstates a claim in, only whether its claims hold up. So we check every product’s marketing against real tests across all categories, then roll it up per brand.?
How they price
Where each brand’s products sit on price — the full range of the line, the median, and the tier each lands in.?
Which brand do people trust more
A single trust reading per brand, built from how honest its marketing is and how the press talks about it — from skeptical to loved.?
Only The Ordinary has enough signal for a trust reading so far (62). It combines marketing honesty and press sentiment.
The verdict, both ways
Read it through both lenses: which brand to trust for the category you’re buying, and who’s the stronger maker overall. They can give different answers — and that’s the honest result.
If you already know what you’re buying, the category decides it — pick the brand that leads the shelf you’re shopping.
As makers: The Ordinary leads 3 of 4 · Typology 0.
Breadth vs focus — and the right answer depends on the shelf.
We don’t crown a winner. Globally they may both be top-tier; locally, the category can flip the answer. Pick the brand that’s strong where you’re actually shopping — when a brand doesn’t compete in a category, we leave it blank rather than invent a rank.
as of June 29 · 3 shared questions?
Common questions
The questions people most often ask, answered from the data above.
By our ranking The Ordinary sits higher overall, but it's breadth vs focus — The Ordinary competes in more categories while the other plays narrower. The answer flips by category: pick the brand that leads the shelf you're shopping.
On that shelf the AI panel ranks The Ordinary higher — #11 against #12.
The Ordinary — named in 59 AI answers across the panel, against Typology's 2.
The Ordinary, ranking in 4 fields versus 1 for Typology.