Two creams.
Most guys grab the wrong one.
If yours keeps coming back no matter what you try — you've been using the mild one. Here's how to know which one is yours, and how to get both for the price of one on your first order.
Two creams. One severity tier each.
Most jock-itch products are built for the same generic case — mild redness, light itch, a flare here and there. That's why the guys with the real fire don't get results from any of them.
New Aura makes two. The mild one keeps things from flaring up. The strong one is built for the case that keeps coming back.
White Cream
- A little redness, mild itch, occasional flare
- Built to use consistently to keep things calm
- Light feel — no stickiness, no staining
Black Cream
- Raw red rings spreading down your inner thighs
- Burn every time you sweat — workout, walk, summer day
- Itch deep enough that you're scratching through your jeans
- For the case that keeps coming back no matter what you've tried
How to know which one to grab.
The honest test isn't how it looks today. It's how it's been behaving.
It's mild and stays mild — a little redness, light itch.
You flare up once in a while — usually after a hot day or a heavy workout.
You want something to use consistently so it doesn't get worse.
You've got raw red rings — usually spreading, not just a spot.
Sweat burns. Sitting down, working out, walking in summer.
You're doing the adjustment thing every time you stand up.
It keeps coming back — no matter how many creams you've already tried.
Most creams numb the surface. The fungus underneath keeps going.
The reason yours comes back two weeks after every cream you try isn't your skin. It's that most products calm the itch on top — they don't go after what's actually causing it. The fungus stays. The flare comes back the next time you sweat.
Numb the itch on the surface. Surface heals for a week. Fungus underneath keeps multiplying. You flare again.
Kills the fungus on contact and keeps killing the spores it leaves behind — so the cycle that keeps bringing it back actually stops.
What it looks like when it stops running your day.
The win isn't a before-and-after photo. It's the moment you realize you haven't done the adjustment in a week. You sat through a full workout and didn't think about it once.
"I stopped doing that little adjustment thing every time I stood up. First time in two years I sat through a full lift without thinking about it."
— Marcus T. · Black cream
"Tried three different creams off the shelf before this. None of them held. This one actually did. It's been six weeks and it hasn't come back."
— D.R. · Black cream
"Mine was never bad — just enough to be annoying. I use the white one a few times a week and it just never flares up anymore."
— Kyle M. · White cream
Both creams for the price of one.
Grab the strength you need today — and have the maintenance cream sitting in the drawer for the days you don't.
Claim both creams →
A few things guys ask before trying it
What if I pick the wrong one?
How fast does it work?
I've already tried Lotrimin, Lamisil, the prescription stuff. Why would this be different?
Will it sting or burn?
What if it doesn't work for me?
Two creams.
Most guys grab the wrong one.
If yours keeps coming back no matter what you try — you've been using the mild one. Here's how to know which one is yours, and how to get both for the price of one on your first order.
See the right one for me →
Two creams. One severity tier each.
Most jock-itch products are built for the same generic case — mild redness, light itch, a flare here and there. That's why the guys with the real fire don't get results from any of them.
New Aura makes two. The mild one keeps things from flaring up. The strong one is built for the case that keeps coming back.
White Cream
- A little redness, mild itch, occasional flare
- Built to use consistently to keep things calm
- Light feel — no stickiness, no staining
Black Cream
- Raw red rings spreading down your inner thighs
- Burn every time you sweat — workout, walk, summer day
- Itch deep enough that you're scratching through your jeans
- For the case that keeps coming back no matter what you've tried
How to know which one to grab.
The honest test isn't how it looks today. It's how it's been behaving.
It's mild and stays mild — a little redness, light itch.
You flare up once in a while — usually after a hot day or a heavy workout.
You want something to use consistently so it doesn't get worse.
You've got raw red rings — usually spreading, not just a spot.
Sweat burns. Sitting down, working out, walking in summer.
You're doing the adjustment thing every time you stand up.
It keeps coming back — no matter how many creams you've already tried.
Most creams numb the surface. The fungus underneath keeps going.
The reason yours comes back two weeks after every cream you try isn't your skin. It's that most products calm the itch on top — they don't go after what's actually causing it. The fungus stays. The flare comes back the next time you sweat.
Numb the itch on the surface. Surface heals for a week. Fungus underneath keeps multiplying. You flare again.
Kills the fungus on contact and keeps killing the spores it leaves behind — so the cycle that keeps bringing it back actually stops.
What it looks like when it stops running your day.
The win isn't a before-and-after photo. It's the moment you realize you haven't done the adjustment in a week. You sat through a full workout and didn't think about it once.
"I stopped doing that little adjustment thing every time I stood up. First time in two years I sat through a full lift without thinking about it."
— Marcus T. · Black cream
"Tried three different creams off the shelf before this. None of them held. This one actually did. It's been six weeks and it hasn't come back."
— D.R. · Black cream
"Mine was never bad — just enough to be annoying. I use the white one a few times a week and it just never flares up anymore."
— Kyle M. · White cream
Both creams for the price of one.
Grab the strength you need today — and have the maintenance cream sitting in the drawer for the days you don't.
Claim both creams →