Why jock itch returns
to the same spot.
Here's why — and the cream that finally closed it.
Four years of Lotrimin. Same patch every summer. What finally broke it.
01You're not doing anything wrong. Your cream can't reach the fungus.
Every round of Lotrimin, the itch settles in 5 days. Ten days later, same patch flares. Most guys think they're doing something wrong.
They're not. Within hours, the fungus builds a protective shield — a biofilm. That makes it 1,000x more resistant to standard antifungals.
Lotrimin kills what sits on top. The fungus underneath? Untouched. Survives every round.
"Guys come in after years of this, assuming they're doing something wrong. They're not. Their cream was never built to reach the fungus under the biofilm."
02While it sits there, the fungus breaks down the door.
There's a second problem. The fungus chews through your skin's outer barrier — the layer built to keep fungus out.
Kill the surface and the door's still open. New fungus walks back in. Same patch. Every time.
03Day 5 is the trap. The itch quiets before the fungus dies.
Itch fading feels like the win. It's not. Surface fungus dies. The protected colony underneath keeps growing.
Relief at day 5. Flare at day 14. Same patch. Forever.
04Two problems. Zero pharmacy creams that solve both.
Protected fungus + damaged barrier. Nothing on the shelf solves both.
05One cream. Three jobs. Running at once.
New Aura uses Dry Safe Complex — break the biofilm, kill the fungus underneath, seal the barrier.
Free of parabens, phthalates, sulfates, synthetic fragrance, dyes.
06The 3-week change isn't about itch. It's about not bracing.
I didn't want relief. I'd had relief four times. I wanted the file closed.
07Same fungus. Different zip code.
By the time most guys notice, it's spread. The fungus follows moisture. You scratch in your sleep. Run your hand through your hair. Towel off head-to-toe.
It moves with you. Same fungus on your feet. Your scalp. Your armpits. New Aura clears it at the source.
08It stays on for hours. A wash rinses off in 60 seconds.
Washes get 60 seconds, then disappear. New Aura stays on 6 to 8 hours. That's hitting the biofilm versus breaking through it.
Contact time reaches the protected fungus. Without it, you're rinsing the surface clean.
09Buy one, get one free. 30 days. Keep both creams either way.
Two creams for the price of one — enough to finish the cycle. If it doesn't break in 30 days, email us. Full refund. Keep both. Less than 1% ask.
10You made it to #10. So here's the only question.
You're not just curious. You're tired of the same patch flaring back two weeks after every round. Two creams. 30 days to find out.
You stop being the guy losing to a cream when you stop using the wrong one.
Why jock itch returns
to the same spot.
Here's why — and the cream that finally closed it.
Four years of Lotrimin. Same patch every summer. What finally broke it.
01You're not doing anything wrong. Your cream can't reach the fungus.
Every round of Lotrimin, the itch settles in 5 days. Ten days later, same patch flares. Most guys think they're doing something wrong.
They're not. Within hours, the fungus builds a protective shield — a biofilm. That makes it 1,000x more resistant to standard antifungals.
Lotrimin kills what sits on top. The fungus underneath? Untouched. Survives every round.
"Guys come in after years of this, assuming they're doing something wrong. They're not. Their cream was never built to reach the fungus under the biofilm."
02While it sits there, the fungus breaks down the door.
There's a second problem. The fungus chews through your skin's outer barrier — the layer built to keep fungus out.
Kill the surface and the door's still open. New fungus walks back in. Same patch. Every time.
03Day 5 is the trap. The itch quiets before the fungus dies.
Itch fading feels like the win. It's not. Surface fungus dies. The protected colony underneath keeps growing.
Relief at day 5. Flare at day 14. Same patch. Forever.
04Two problems. Zero pharmacy creams that solve both.
Protected fungus + damaged barrier. Nothing on the shelf solves both.
05One cream. Three jobs. Running at once.
New Aura uses Dry Safe Complex — break the biofilm, kill the fungus underneath, seal the barrier.
Free of parabens, phthalates, sulfates, synthetic fragrance, dyes.
Try New Aura Risk-Free →06The 3-week change isn't about itch. It's about not bracing.
I didn't want relief. I'd had relief four times. I wanted the file closed.
07Same fungus. Different zip code.
By the time most guys notice, it's spread. The fungus follows moisture. You scratch in your sleep. Run your hand through your hair. Towel off head-to-toe.
It moves with you. Same fungus on your feet. Your scalp. Your armpits. New Aura clears it at the source.
08It stays on for hours. A wash rinses off in 60 seconds.
Washes get 60 seconds, then disappear. New Aura stays on 6 to 8 hours. That's hitting the biofilm versus breaking through it.
Contact time reaches the protected fungus. Without it, you're rinsing the surface clean.
09Buy one, get one free. 30 days. Keep both creams either way.
Two creams for the price of one — enough to finish the cycle. If it doesn't break in 30 days, email us. Full refund. Keep both. Less than 1% ask.
10You made it to #10. So here's the only question.
You're not just curious. You're tired of the same patch flaring back two weeks after every round. Two creams. 30 days to find out.
Try New Aura Risk-Free → Buy one, get one free · 30-day money-back · Free shippingYou stop being the guy losing to a cream when you stop using the wrong one.