Scrolling through my Instagram feed, I kept seeing ads for “NUVI” by Skinatiks, promising salon-level IPL hair-removal at home, with minimal fuss. The idea sounded compelling: shave less, smooth skin more, skip the expensive treatments. I decided to buy one, set it up, and test how it worked in real life over several weeks.

What Is the NUVI Skinatiks IPL Hair-Removal Device?
NUVI is marketed as an at-home IPL (intense pulsed light) hair-removal handset. The brand claims features like: five intensity levels, 300,000+ flashes (valid for over 10 years of use), safe on body and bikini areas, suitable for full-body treatment in around 20 minutes, and “results from the first sessions.” The promotional price is approximately €89.99 (~US$95) (originally €179.99), representing a 50% discount.
Why I Tried It
I was tired of frequent shaving and waxing… my legs, underarms, and bikini line felt like constant upkeep. If NUVI could reduce hair regrowth and give smoother skin without salon visits, it would be a worthwhile time- and money-saver. The appealing discount price and “permanent results” claims sealed the deal.
My Experience Using It
When the device arrived, I was impressed by the sleek packaging and included accessories (handset, power adapter, protective glasses). First session: I shaved the underarm, set the intensity to the lowest setting, and applied one flash across the zone. The light was bright, but the sensation was a mild warmth that was manageable. I expected visible changes soon.

Over the first two weeks, I treated my underarms and lower legs weekly (per instructions). At around week three, I noticed some slower regrowth… hair seemed finer, but not dramatically reduced. By week six, I had done several sessions. Regrowth was still clearly present, especially in areas with darker hair. One evening, I noticed the handpiece got warm during use, which made me pause.
Another issue: for the “bikini line” treatment, I found the device bulky and awkward to handle in that zone. And the brand’s claim of a 20-minute full-body treatment sounded optimistic based on how slowly I worked each zone and how cautious I felt.
By week eight, I was disappointed: yes, hair reduction is happening, but not to the “permanent smooth” level I expected. On my lower legs, I was still shaving every few days. The promise of “results from first sessions” seems inflated in my case. For the cost, the performance felt underwhelming.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Beginner-friendly setup: came with glasses, adapter, manual.
- Comfortable sensation: mild heat, not painful.
- Some measurable reduction in hair thickness/regrowth in certain areas.
- One-time cost, no cartridges or refills mentioned.
Cons
- Results are slow and inconsistent, especially on thicker/darker hair.
- Full-body treatment time is longer and more tedious than advertised.
- Device hand-piece gets warm; ergonomics less ideal for tricky zones.
- Marketing claims (“results from first session”, “permanent smooth”) oversell.
- Price may still be high for the level of results I observed.
Build and
The plastic housing is smooth, the power cable solid. During use, the light flash is sudden and bright, and you feel a warm pulse. It’s not unpleasant, but I did prefer wearing sunglasses/glasses to avoid after-flash glare. The feel of treated skin afterward was normal, not obviously “treatment-effected”, which speaks to subtlety, but also to limited immediate sensation.
Product Claims vs. Reality
Claim: “Permanent smooth skin at home, no salon needed.”
Reality: Some smoother patches, but still shaving regularly in many treated zones. Not yet “permanent smooth.”
Claim: “Full body in 20 minutes.”
Reality: My full-body working pace was more like 30–40 minutes when being cautious and covering all zones.
Claim: “Results from first sessions.”
Reality: I felt minor reduction by week 3–4; not dramatic in first session.
Is It a Scam?
No, it’s not outright a scam… you receive a functioning IPL handset, and it does offer real hair-reduction potential, which I personally experienced. However, the branding and claims lean heavily into “miracle device” territory. If you expect instant, permanent hair removal after a few uses, you’re setting yourself up for disappointment. Also worth checking: what hair types and skin-tones the device is best for (darker skin tones/very light hair often get less benefit).
Ingredient/Material Breakdown
- Handset housing: plastic with metal flash window.
- Flash window: delivers IPL pulses (no explicit joules or flash energy disclosed).
- 5 intensity levels selectable (per site).
- Protective goggles included (good safety practice).
- Power adapter included (universal voltage not clearly detailed).
The major missing detail: no published independent energy/joule/flash specification, and little info on skin-tone/hair-type efficacy thresholds.
Where to Buy & Price Point
- Official site (Skinatiks.com) — listed at €89.99 (50% off original €179.99) for the NUVI device.
- Free shipping, 2-year warranty, 100-day satisfaction guarantee claimed.
- If you see significantly lower prices elsewhere or “stock clearance” deals, investigate legitimacy and warranty terms.
How to Use
- Shave the target area before use (clean, dry, no lotion).
- Choose an intensity level (start at lowest).
- Place the flash window flat on the skin and trigger the flash.
- Move systematically over the area, avoiding overlapping too much.
- Use weekly for first 4 weeks, then every 2 weeks for maintenance (per brand suggestion).
- Wear protective glasses during use, avoid treating near eyes.
- Track hair-regrowth and adapt intensity only if skin tolerates it.
Alternatives to Consider
- NuFACE Mini+ Starter Kit
- NuFACE Trinity+ Starter Kit
- Nu Skin RenuSpa iO
Conclusion — Would I Recommend It?
If you’re willing to move at a realistic pace, understand that hair-reduction devices take consistent use, and your hair/skin type aligns (fair to medium skin + darker hair), yes, you can get value out of the NUVI IPL device. But if you’re expecting quick, permanent, full-body hair removal in a few sessions like salon lasers, I’d caution. For the money I spent, I felt the results were modest and the hype was higher than the reality.
Would I buy it again? Possibly, but only if the price was deeply discounted and I accepted slower progress. Would I recommend it to a friend? Yes, with caveats and adjusted expectations.
Also read – Werowin.com Review: Legit Crypto Gaming Platform? Find Out Before Signing Up
