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Uberlube Silicone Lubricant

Uberlube is a silicone-based lubricant with four ingredients: three silicones and a touch of vitamin E. Glycerin-free, paraben-free, fragrance-free. The glide lasts. The ingredient list doesn't.

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Why we stock Uberlube

Most silicone-based lubricants on Australian shelves carry more than they need to. Longer ingredient lists. Fragrance you didn't ask for. Glycerin slipped in despite a "clean" label promise. Uberlube is the exception: three silicones, a touch of vitamin E, and nothing else. Glycerin-free, paraben-free, fragrance-free. A long-lasting glide without the workaround ingredient list.

When Uberlube is the right choice

Couples and intimate comfort

Silicone-based lubricants outlast water-based by a long way. A drop or two of Uberlube does the work of a generous water-based pump, so you reapply less and stay present more. Shower-safe (water doesn't rinse it off the skin). Non-staining on most fabrics, provided you wash sheets promptly.

Intimacy during the menopause years

Lower oestrogen during menopause often means thinner, less elastic vaginal tissue. A long-lasting glide that doesn't sting on contact can make intimacy more comfortable. To be clear: Uberlube isn't a treatment for menopause dryness. It's a lubricant, not a moisturiser. As a glycerin-free silicone option, it's a comfortable pick for intimacy itself.

For day-to-day dryness, YES VM is the moisturiser to look at. It sits alongside Uberlube rather than replacing it. The full menopause range is in our menopause collection.

Sensitive skin and reactive bodies

Fragrance, glycerin, parabens and warming agents are common irritants in personal lubricants. Uberlube has none of them: three silicones plus vitamin E, full stop. About as low-reactive a silicone lubricant as you'll find β€” a useful pick when most other lubricants irritate.

An honest note on silicone dilators

Silicone lubricant degrades silicone surfaces over time. It dulls the finish and shortens the device's lifespan. So Uberlube isn't the pairing for a silicone dilator session. Use a water-based lubricant for the dilator itself; keep Uberlube for partnered intimacy. Both can sit in the same bedside drawer.

What's actually in it

Three silicones (dimethicone, dimethiconol, cyclomethicone) handle the glide. Tocopheryl acetate (vitamin E) gives it a silky finish. Four ingredients in total, with nothing added for fragrance, flavour or shelf stability.

For a side-by-side with water-based options, our silicone vs water-based guide goes deeper.

55ml or 112ml?

55ml is the handbag bottle. Small enough to travel with, easy to slip into an overnight bag. 112ml is the bedside bottle and the better per-millilitre value. You only need a drop or two either way, so both bottles last.

Frequently asked questions

No. Silicone lubricant degrades silicone surfaces over time. It dulls the finish and shortens the life of the device. For silicone dilators or toys, use a water-based lubricant instead. Uberlube is the right call for skin-to-skin intimacy with a partner. Just not for direct contact with the device itself.

For most people, yes. Uberlube has four ingredients (three silicones and vitamin E) and no fragrance, glycerin, parabens, or warming agents. That short ingredient list makes it a low-reactive choice when most lubes irritate. Patch-test if you've reacted to other products before.

No. Uberlube is a personal lubricant. It adds glide during intimacy but it doesn't treat the underlying tissue changes of low oestrogen. If you're managing menopausal dryness day-to-day, see your GP or pelvic physio about vaginal moisturisers and, where appropriate, topical oestrogen.

Yes. Uberlube has four ingredients: dimethicone, dimethiconol, cyclomethicone, and vitamin E. There's no glycerin, no parabens, and no added fragrance, flavour, or warming agents. Nothing else in the bottle.

Yes for natural rubber latex and polyisoprene condoms (that covers most of what's on the Australian market). Not for polyurethane. Uberlube has third-party lab testing on this for its FDA registration. Always check your condom packaging if you're not sure of the material.

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