Ami Cole Lip Oil: Is This ‘Clean’ Formula Actually Non-Toxic?

Greenwashing Check
It says ‘clean beauty’ on the tube—so why does the ingredient list spark more questions than answers?
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
🔍 **The Shiny Trap**

So Ami Cole sent me this lip oil and my first thought was “cute packaging, what’s the catch?” — because the word “clean” on a tube is basically a red flag to me now. The catch? It’s not actually an oil. It’s a balm that’s been gaslit into thinking it’s glossy.

The real issue: “non-toxic” marketing makes you think you’re safe, but their fragrance is listed as “natural flavor” — which tells me exactly nothing. That’s not transparency, that’s a loophole.

[IMG_1: Close-up of the Ami Cole Lip Oil tube next to a suspicious ingredient list]

🧪 **The “Oil” That Isn’t**

It’s $24 for 0.12 oz. The claim that got me: “hydrating, non-sticky lip oil with clean ingredients.” Sounds dreamy. But here’s where it gets weird:

1

Texture Lie

It’s a balm in an oil’s clothing — thick, not slippy. Put it on and it sits there like a waxy film.

2

Scent Situation

Smells like a melted fruit candy. Pleasant? Sure. But “natural flavor” could be anything from bergamot to boot leather.

3

Staying Power

Lasts about 45 minutes before it vanishes. For $24, I want a commitment.

[IMG_2: Swatch on a hand showing the balmy texture vs. a real oil]

📋 **Ingredients: The Good, The Vague, The Huh**

Castor oil and jojoba esters are doing the heavy lifting — decent for hydration, but nothing revolutionary. The “natural flavor” is where I side-eye. If you’re gonna be “clean,” tell me what that flavor actually is.

  • Castor Oil: Plumps and seals moisture, but can be drying for some
  • Jojoba Esters: Mimics skin’s natural sebum, nice for barrier
  • Tocopherol (Vitamin E): Antioxidant, prevents rancidity
  • Natural Flavor: AKA undisclosed fragrance — my least favorite word

[IMG_3: Ingredient list cropped with “Natural Flavor” circled in red]

⚖️ **The Texture Test: Slick or Stick?**

First swipe: feels like a thick balm. Not oily at all. It’s sticky — think lip gloss that forgot to be glossy. I had to wipe it off after 10 minutes because my hair kept getting caught. Not cute.

Week 2: I tried again on drier lips. It actually sits better — less sticky, more like a protective layer. But it never becomes glossy. It’s a balm that refuses to admit its identity.

💡

One Thing: Apply on damp lips — the moisture helps it spread thinner and cuts the stickiness by half. Use a drop of water, not your whole face.

[IMG_4: Lip application showing the thick texture, hair stuck to corner]

💄 **Did It Actually Do Anything?**

My lips felt… fine. Not plump, not dry, just fine. The “plumping” claim is marketing noise — no tingling, no volume change. What measurably changed: I used less lip balm that week. What stayed the same: my desire for a real glossy oil.

Buy if
You want a thick, protective balm in a cute tube and don’t care about shine
⏭️

Skip if
You actually want a lip oil — this is a balm, and it’s sticky
💰

Worth it?
$24 for 0.12 oz? No. A $8 tube of Vaseline does the same job without the mystery flavor.

[IMG_5: Price tag next to a drugstore balm for comparison]

✅ **The Honest Cut**

Ami Cole Lip Oil is a perfectly fine balm with a branding problem. It’s not a miracle, not a scam, just a product that’s confused about its own identity. If you want “clean,” go ahead — just know you’re paying for the label, not the formula.

5.5/10
Good balm, bad oil, overpriced
🛍️

Where to Buy: Buy direct from Ami Cole — but honestly, try a travel-size lip balm first. Don’t fall for the tube.