Typology wants you to think its Tinted Serum is a glass-skin miracle from a minimalist apothecary. But flip that bottle over — there’s phenoxyethanol in there.
Green beauty purists won’t touch it. Phenoxyethanol is a synthetic preservative that some “clean” brands ban outright, even if it’s technically allowed in organic formulations. The irony? They hide it under “parfum” in the ingredients list, so you’d never know unless you squint.
It’s a lightweight, water-based tinted serum with SPF 30 — $38 for 30ml. The claim: “clean, non-toxic makeup that evens skin tone.” I bought it because every influencer promised it was the new no-makeup makeup.
Texture
Watery, almost like a thin emulsion — not a gel, not a cream
Shade range
5 shades, all leaning warm. If you’re neutral or cool, you’re out of luck
Coverage
Sheer, like a blur filter — but it won’t cover a zit
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
Hero ingredients: squalane (hydration), zinc oxide (mineral SPF), and a touch of niacinamide (calms redness). But the preservative game is messy — they use phenoxyethanol and a synthetic fragrance blend that’s not disclosed.
- Squalane: Actually moisturizes, doesn’t just sit on top
- Zinc Oxide (non-nano): Real mineral sun protection
- Niacinamide: Fades redness over time
- Phenoxyethanol: The ‘clean’ loophole preservative
Photo: Soheil Kmp / Unsplash
First pump: feels like water — absorbs in 8 seconds. Then it dries down matte, but not flat. I looked like I’d slept 8 hours, not 4. That’s the good part.
By week two, I noticed tiny dry patches on my cheeks. The squalane isn’t enough for my normal-dry skin. And the synthetic fragrance? My nose picked it up every morning — a faint powdery floral that doesn’t belong in a “clean” product.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
My skin looked more even — not perfect, but better. Redness around my nose faded by 30%. But the dryness never went away. And the SPF 30 protection? It held up through a 20-minute walk, but I wouldn’t trust it for a beach day.
Photo: Sonia Roselli / Unsplash
Typology’s Tinted Serum is a decent everyday product — just don’t believe the “clean” hype. It’s a solid 6/10 for lazy days, but not a holy grail or a green win.