Every “clean” beauty brand swears by the same script. InnBeauty Project Green Machine is the latest darling — Sephora kids eat it up. But their preservative system? It’s a loophole, not a promise.
They use sodium benzoate and potassium sorbate. Fine individually. But mix them in a low-pH formula (which this is, thanks to lactic acid) and you get benzene. A known carcinogen. They don’t test for it in their final product.
$34 for 1 oz. The claim: “15% vitamin C + lactic acid for glow without irritation.” I bought it because the marketing is gorgeous — and I’m a sucker for a good bottle.
THD Ascorbate
A vitamin C derivative. Gentler than L-ascorbic acid, but also less proven for collagen synthesis.
Lactic Acid
5% concentration. Exfoliates gently, but not enough to actually resurface texture if you’re seasoned with acids.
Sodium Benzoate
Preservative. Works fine in high pH. This formula sits around pH 4.5 — unstable territory.
Photo: Sonia Roselli / Unsplash
Here’s where it gets annoying. The hero ingredients are fine on paper, but the delivery system is lazy. Vitamin C degrades fast in this bottle — you’ll notice it turning amber within three weeks.
- THD Ascorbate: Brightens, but oxidizes before you finish the bottle
- Lactic Acid: Gentle exfoliation, but too weak for real texture
- Sodium Benzoate: Preservative that can form benzene in acidic formulas
- Potassium Sorbate: Paired with above — same risk, no third-party testing
Watery. Smells like lemon yogurt left in a gym bag. Absorbs in about 12 seconds — no stickiness, which I respect. First week I thought, *okay, this is fine*.
Week two: my chin broke out in tiny closed comedones. Not purging — just clogged. The lactic acid is too weak to push them out, and the vitamin C is oxidizing before it can do anything meaningful.
My skin looked mildly more awake. But the hyperpigmentation I was targeting? Unmoved. Zero difference in my dark spots after 4 weeks. The glow is real — but temporary, like a spritz of water on a wilted plant.
Green Machine is a well-marketed starter serum that fumbles the clean promise. The preservative system is a red flag, and the results don’t justify the price. Hard skip.