Is Activist Skincare’s The Gentle Cleanse Actually Clean?

Greenwashing Check
This viral balm claims 100% natural, but our ingredient audit found a synthetic surfactant hiding in plain sight.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
**Section 1**

🔎 **The “Natural” Lie**

That viral balm everyone’s slathering on? Claims 100% natural. But I ran the ingredient list through my usual audit tools, and guess what’s hiding in plain sight? Coco-glucoside. That’s a synthetic surfactant. Not the end of the world, but “100% natural” it is not.

The real issue? This isn’t about safety—coco-glucoside is fine. It’s about the brand betting you won’t check. And honestly? Most people won’t.

**Section 2**

🧴 **What You’re Actually Paying For**

$34 for 3.4 oz. A balm-to-milk cleanser that melts off sunscreen without stripping. The claim that hooked me: “Only 9 ingredients, all from nature.”

1. **Balm-to-Milk Texture** – Solid at first, turns into a milky oil with water. No greasy film.
2. **No-Fragrance** – Actually true. Smells like… nothing. Which I prefer.
3. **One-Step Removal** – Takes off waterproof mascara in one pass. No double cleanse needed.

a bottle of eye gel sitting on top of a green carpet

Photo: Viktoriia Muzyka / Unsplash

**Section 3**

📜 **The Ingredient Reality Check**

Three oils do the heavy lifting here. But that fourth ingredient? The synthetic one. Let’s be real—it’s still gentle. But the “natural” claim is marketing fluff.

– **Sunflower Seed Oil** – Lightweight, non-clogging base that dissolves oil-based grime.
– **Jojoba Esters** – Mimics skin’s sebum, so it doesn’t strip your barrier.
– **Coco-glucoside** – The synthetic. Derived from coconut, but processed. Still mild, still effective.
– **Vitamin E** – Antioxidant. Keeps the balm from going rancid.

woman putting makeup in front of mirror

Photo: kevin laminto / Unsplash

**Section 4**

⚗️ **The Texture Test**

First scoop felt like cold butter. Melts instantly on contact—like, 3 seconds. Rinses off without that slippery “did I get it all?” panic. My skin felt… clean but not tight. That’s rare.

Week two: I started breaking out. Small, surface-level bumps. Not the balm’s fault—I think it was purging from a new retinol. But I paused it for 3 days, skin calmed down. Reintroduced it slowly. Fine now.

💡 **One Thing** – Warm it between your palms for 5 seconds before applying. Cold balm doesn’t spread as evenly and you’ll use too much.

black and white labeled bottle

Photo: Elsa Olofsson / Unsplash

**Section 5**

🚩 **The Honest Verdict**

After 4 weeks: my skin felt softer. Less redness. But my blackheads? Same as before. This balm doesn’t dissolve them—just removes surface oil. Don’t expect a deep pore purge.

✅ **Buy if** – You wear heavy sunscreen or makeup daily and want one-step removal without stripping.

⏭️ **Skip if** – You have acne-prone skin that hates oils. This isn’t a cleanser for breakouts.

💰 **Worth it?** – $34 for 3.4 oz. Lasts about 2 months. For a daily balm? Fair. But the “natural” claim is a lie.

silver ring on brown wooden table

Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash

**Section 6**

✅ **Final Call**

It’s a good cleanser. But it’s not “100% natural.” And that bothers me more than the actual ingredient. Call it what it is: a gentle, effective balm with a marketing problem.

**6.5/10** – Good balm, bad branding

🛍️ **Where to Buy** – Activist Skincare’s site directly. Skip Amazon—I’ve seen fakes. Try the travel size ($14) first.

**Rating Box**
6.5/10 – Good balm, bad branding