You know that smug feeling when you buy something labeled “clean”? Yeah, Sachi Skin cashes in on that. But the tiny print on their Triphala Pigment Corrector says “phenoxyethanol” — the most common synthetic preservative in skincare.
That’s not the problem. The problem is they market it like it’s plucked from a forest while using the same preservative every drugstore brand does. Also: their “sustainable” glass bottle? No refill program. Just more glass.
It’s a beige, water-cream hybrid — $68 for 50ml. The claim that got me: “dark spot eraser in 4 weeks.” Bold. I had to test it.
Triphala Complex
Three Ayurvedic fruits — amla, bibhitaki, haritaki — meant to fade pigmentation like a gentle eraser.
Kojic Acid
The gold standard for brightening, but here it’s buried mid-list — not the star they pretend it is.
Synthetic Base
Water, glycerin, and that phenoxyethanol. Nothing groundbreaking. Smells faintly of… oatmeal?
Let’s be real: Triphala is legit for brightening — it’s been used in Ayurveda for centuries. But the concentration here is so low it feels like a sprinkle of herbs on a bagel. The real heavy lifting is done by kojic acid and niacinamide, which are fine, but not “clean” magic.
- Triphala Extract: Antioxidant-rich but diluted
- Kojic Acid: Works but can irritate if overused
- Niacinamide: Calms redness, evens tone
- Phenoxyethanol: Synthetic preservative, not ‘clean’
First squeeze: watery, sinks in 30 seconds flat. No stickiness — I’ll give them that. It feels like nothing on your skin, which is weirdly satisfying. But also makes you wonder if it’s doing anything.
Week 2: My hyperpigmentation from a pimple looked… slightly less angry. But the glow? Non-existent. I expected a dewy finish, but it’s matte and forgettable. What surprised me: it actually clogs my pores if I use it twice daily. Not a “clean” feeling.
After 4 weeks: my old sun spots faded maybe 20% — not nothing, but not “erased.” The fresh spots from breakouts? Gone faster. So it’s decent for new marks, useless for deep ones. Also no change in overall skin brightness.
It’s not a scam, but it’s not the clean, green miracle they sell. A decent product dressed up in marketing that doesn’t match the reality. If you want results, save your money for something with actual vitamin C or prescription-strength ingredients.