Is This ‘Clean’ Vitamin C Serum Actually Clean? We Investigate

Greenwashing Check
This cult-favorite serum claims clinical purity, but does its ‘clean’ label hold up under scrutiny?
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🔬The Cult Serum

Everyone swears by this one. Derms, editors, that friend with suspiciously perfect skin.

But its ‘clean’ claim is the real test — clinical brands love that buzzword now. Is it legit or just marketing?

2.🌿The Breakdown

SkinCeuticals C E Ferulic. $182 for 1 oz. They call it “purity with clinical results.” A bold promise.

1

15% L-Ascorbic Acid

The gold-standard form of vitamin C.

2

1% Vitamin E

Boosts antioxidant protection by 4x.

3

0.5% Ferulic Acid

Stabilizes the formula — extends shelf life.

3.⚠️The Ingredient Truth

The active trio is impeccable. Proven to neutralize free radicals. But the full list tells a different story.

  • Phenoxyethanol: Common synthetic preservative
  • Propylene Glycol: Penetration enhancer, can be irritating
  • Benzyl Alcohol: Another synthetic preservative
  • Water: Makes up the bulk of the formula
4.📊The Feel Test

Smells like hot dog water — seriously. Thin, oily texture. Absorbs in 30 seconds, leaves a tacky film.

That film? It pills under sunscreen. Annoying. But my skin looked brighter by day 10 — no denying it.

💡

One Thing: Apply to BONE-DRY skin. Damp skin makes it sting and turn orange.
5.💡Who It’s For

Faded some sunspots. Skin looked firmer. Zero effect on fine lines. The glow is real, but so is the price.

Buy if
You have normal/dry skin and want proven antioxidant defense.
⏭️

Skip if
You’re sensitive to synthetics or hate any texture besides water.
💰

Worth it?
For the actives, yes. For the ‘clean’ label, no. You’re paying for the research.
6.Final Call

A brilliant, clinically-proven serum. But ‘clean’? That’s greenwashing. It’s a pharmaceutical-grade product in a natural beauty costume.

8.5/10
Brilliant formula, questionable marketing.
🛍️

Where to Buy: Dermstore or SkinCeuticals directly. Get a sample first — the smell/texture is divisive.