Is Natch Gabrielle Essence Serum Truly Clean? An Investigation

Greenwashing Check
This viral serum claims 100% natural ingredients — but hidden synthetics and vague sourcing tell a different story.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
**Section 1 of 6**

1.🔍Clean Label, Messy Truth

Natch’s Gabrielle Essence Serum says “100% natural” right on the box. Then I flipped it over and found phenoxyethanol — a synthetic preservative that’s literally banned in natural cosmetics in the EU.

This isn’t just a whoopsie. It’s the kind of fine print that makes you wonder what else they’re not saying. Their “wild-harvested” baobab? Sourced from a single supplier in Ghana with zero third-party certification.

**Section 2 of 6**

2.🧪$68 for Confusion

It’s a lightweight serum, $68 for 30ml. The claim that hooked me: “From seed to bottle, we control everything.” Sounds noble — until you realize they don’t own a single farm or lab.

1

Texture Lies

Feels like water going on, then sticky for 90 seconds. Not cute under makeup.

2

Scent Drama

Smells like a farmer’s market exploded — earthy, green, borderline grassy. You’ll either love it or gag.

3

Dropper Disaster

The dropper sucks. Half the time you get air. The other half, too much product.

white and clear glass container on brown wooden table

Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash

**Section 3 of 6**

3.📜The Ingredient Shell Game

Hero ingredients are baobab oil (omega-rich, but cheap) and aloe vera (hydrating, basic). The “proprietary blend” is marketing speak for “we won’t tell you the percentages.” The preservative issue is the real kicker — it’s clean-washing, plain and simple.

  • Baobab Oil: softens skin, but not special
  • Aloe Vera: soothes, but you’ve seen this before
  • Phenoxyethanol: synthetic preservative, not natural
  • Fragrance: listed as ‘natural,’ but no disclosure
a couple of bottles and a mirror

Photo: Mariia Shalabaieva / Unsplash

**Section 4 of 6**

4.⚠️Two Weeks of Side-Eye

First pump: smells like I rubbed a salad on my face. Absorbs in about 10 seconds — then leaves a tacky film for another 20. Not dewy, not matte. Just… there.

Week 3: My skin looked fine. Not better, not worse. But a friend with sensitive skin broke out in tiny red bumps. We compared batches — different preservative concentrations. That’s the problem with vague sourcing.

💡

One Thing: Use it at night only. The tackiness + sunscreen = pilling disaster. Apply to damp skin, not dry.
person holding white plastic bottle pouring white liquid on white ceramic mug

Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash

**Section 5 of 6**

5.Did It Do Anything?

My skin felt slightly plumper after 10 days. But the glow? That’s just the aloe — you get the same effect from a $12 gel. The fine lines didn’t budge. The “wild-harvested” story is the only thing that’s truly special here, and it’s thin.

Buy if
You’re a hardcore natural convert who doesn’t mind a sticky finish
⏭️

Skip if
You have sensitive skin or care about actual clean certification
💰

Worth it?
No. $68 for basic hydration with a side of greenwashing. Pass.
black and brown makeup palette on white textile

Photo: Laura Chouette / Unsplash

**Section 6 of 6**

6.💡The Honest Verdict

Natch is selling a story, not a serum. The ingredients are fine — but the label is a lie, and the price is a joke for what you get. There are better, actually transparent options for half the cost.

4.5/10
Good story, bad execution
🛍️

Where to Buy: Don’t. But if you must, buy the travel size from Sephora first — $22 to test without the regret.