Sachi Skin slaps “non-toxic” on the front like it’s fact. But I checked the INCI list — and there’s a synthetic ester hiding in plain sight.
The brand plays the clean card hard. But “non-toxic” isn’t regulated. Anyone can print it. That $128 price tag doesn’t automatically mean purity.
🧪 **What You’re Actually Paying For**
It’s a three-phase hybrid serum — oil, water, and powder activated when you shake. $128 for 30ml. The claim that got me: “clean enough to eat.” Bold. Also unhinged.
Tri-Phasic Delivery
Three separate phases that mix on use — supposedly keeps actives stable longer.
No Preservatives System
No parabens or phenoxyethanol. But they use a fermentation-derived preservative blend instead.
Glass + Recyclable Packaging
Heavy glass bottle. Feels premium. But shipping weight = carbon cost.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
📋 **Ingredients — The Honest Breakdown**
Hero ingredients are bakuchiol (retinol alternative), tremella mushroom (hydration), and sea buckthorn (antioxidant). But the base includes caprylic/capric triglyceride — a coconut-derived ester that’s technically “clean” but processed. Not dirty. Just not farm-fresh.
- Bakuchiol: Plumps without retinol redness
- Tremella Mushroom: Holds 500x its weight in water — better than HA
- Sea Buckthorn: Omega-7 for barrier repair
- Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride: Texture agent — clean but processed
Photo: Look Studio / Unsplash
⚖️ **Texture & Reality Check**
Shake, pump, apply — it’s a thin milky oil that disappears in about 12 seconds. No grease. Just a satiny slip. First week I thought it was doing nothing. Too lightweight to be serious.
Week 3 hit different. Woke up with a filter-like glow. But here’s the catch — it pilled under my sunscreen. Had to wait 4 full minutes between layers. Annoying.
Photo: simon / Unsplash
💬 **The Real Results**
Texture improved 30% by week 3. Fine lines around my mouth? Still there. But my skin stopped drinking moisturizer like it was parched. That was unexpected.
Photo: pmv chamara / Unsplash
🏷️ **Final Call**
Is it “non-toxic”? By most clean beauty standards, yes. But the marketing overshadows the science. It’s a solid serum — not a revolution.