Typology’s Tinted Serum has 10 ingredients. Sounds saintly. But two of them — caprylic/capric triglyceride and tocopherol — get flagged by Yuka and Think Dirty as moderate risks. Irritation concerns. Low probability, but still.
Meanwhile, the brand leans hard into French pharmacy minimalism. The disconnect? That’s the greenwashing check.
🧪 **The 10-Ingredient Promise**
It’s $30. A tinted serum, not a foundation. Sheer coverage, SPF-free. The claim that got me: “clean enough to sleep in.” Bold.
Texture
Watery gel. Dries in 45 seconds flat.
Shade range
6 shades. None neutral — all lean peachy or gray.
Packaging
Glass dropper. Heavy. Satisfying clink.
📋 **Ingredient Audit**
Hero: squalane (hydration), zinc oxide (mattifying). No fragrance. No alcohol. But the “moderate risk” tag on caprylic/capric triglyceride? It’s a coconut-derived emollient. Fine for most. Not for fungal acne.
- Squalane: Locks moisture without grease
- Zinc Oxide: Blurs pores instantly
- Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride: Smooth texture, but feeds malassezia
- Tocopherol: Vitamin E — low allergy risk for some
⚠️ **The First Week**
Slides on like cold yogurt. Sheer, dewy, almost invisible. I looked like I’d just done a face mask — glowy but not wet. By hour 3, my T-zone went slick.
Week 2 surprise: it pills under silicone-based primers. Bad. But alone? Fine. Unexpected win: no breakouts. Even with the flagged ingredients.
✅ **The Verdict After a Month**
My redness? Down 30%. Congestion? Same as before. It’s not transformative — it’s a subtle tint with decent skincare. The “clean” label feels more marketing than science.
💬 **Bottom Line**
Clean-ish? Sure. Greenwashed? Slightly. But for a no-makeup makeup day, it’s one of the least annoying options I’ve tried.