This cleanser started in a family’s actual kitchen. They were cold-pressing kale and spinach for juice long before it was a $12 add-on at Sweetgreen.
The real story? They got bored of drinking all those greens and wondered what would happen if they washed their face with them. That curiosity is the whole brand.
It’s a gel cleanser, $38 for 8 oz. I tried it because the claim was refreshingly simple: clean skin without the tight, squeaky feeling. No miracle promises.
Texture
A vibrant, green gel that looks like liquefied salad.
Scent
Fresh, like crushed parsley – not a synthetic “spa” fragrance.
Packaging
The bottle is sturdy glass – feels premium, is a hazard in the shower.
It’s not magic, it’s chemistry. The hero ingredients are cold-pressed, which supposedly preserves more antioxidants than cooked or dried versions. That’s the farm-to-face part.
- Kale: Fights free radicals from pollution
- Spinach: Rich in vitamins C, E, & K
- Green Tea: Calms redness & irritation
- Alfalfa: A vitamin/mineral booster
It lathers into a light, airy foam – not the thick, suffocating kind. Skin feels clean but still soft, like you patted it dry with a towel, not stripped it with a paper napkin.
By week two, my morning redness was noticeably calmer. The surprise? It removes light makeup and sunscreen perfectly, but I’d never trust it with a full beat.
My complexion looks clearer, more even. Zero change in blackheads or deep congestion – it’s a surface-level cleanser, and that’s okay.
It’s a brilliant, gentle daily cleanser with a legit story. Youth to the People didn’t reinvent the wheel – they just made it green and really pleasant to use.