So Sylveco swapped water for birch sap in this serum. Sounds cool — until you realize “birch sap” is basically just fancy tree water with a marketing degree.
The real catch? They don’t fully disclose the fragrance composition. “Parfum” on an INCI list is a red flag when you’re billing yourself as “clean.”
It’s a lightweight, milky serum — $22 for 30ml. The claim that hooked me: “revitalizes tired skin without water dilution.” Birch sap is the first ingredient, not water.
Birch Sap Base
Thinner than water, absorbs in about 12 seconds flat.
No Added Water
The sap does double duty — hydration + a whisper of minerals.
Kale Extract
Sounds trendy, but it’s mostly antioxidant theater at this concentration.
Here’s the thing — the hero ingredients are decent, but the “clean” label gets muddy when you spot parfum and a few synthetic thickeners. Not dirty, just not as pure as they’d like you to think.
- Birch Sap: Mineral-rich hydration, not magic
- Kale Extract: Mild antioxidant, mostly for the label
- Sodium Hyaluronate: The real hydration workhorse
- Parfum: Undisclosed blend — 🚩 for sensitive skin
Texture is shockingly thin — drips off your finger if you’re not fast. First impression was “did I even put anything on?” No tackiness. No film. Just gone.
Week 2: My skin looked slightly less tired, but honestly? That could be the 10 hours of sleep I got. The fragrance is a faint herbal scent that disappears fast — thank god.
My fine lines stayed exactly the same. My hydration levels bumped up maybe 15%. No breakouts, no irritation — but no miracles either.
It’s clean-ish. Not a scam, not a savior. Birch sap is a nice gimmick, but the undisclosed fragrance keeps this from true clean status.