That pink bottle is everywhere. But the ‘clean’ label feels like a marketing trophy now.
We dug into the claims — the real test is in the packaging and the preservatives they have to use.
It’s a $39 serum from Glow Recipe. Sold as a hydrating, glow-boosting multitasker. I bought into the ‘refillable’ promise.
Refillable Bottle
You buy a new pod, not a whole new bottle.
Vegan & Cruelty-Free
No animal-derived ingredients or testing.
‘Clean’ at Sephora
Meets Sephora’s clean beauty standards.
Photo: Chang Duong / Unsplash
Niacinamide and hyaluronic acid are the workhorses here. They hydrate and help with texture. The watermelon extract? Mostly for scent.
- Niacinamide (2%): Minimizes pores, evens tone.
- Hyaluronic Acid: Plumps with hydration.
- Watermelon Extract: Provides light fragrance.
- Phenoxyethanol: The necessary preservative — not ‘bad,’ but proves ‘clean’ is fuzzy.
Photo: Renaldo Matamoro / Unsplash
Texture is a thin, slick gel. Smells like a Jolly Rancher — seriously. Absorbs in 15 seconds, leaves a tacky film.
That film never fully went away. My makeup sometimes pilled over it. The glow is real, but it’s a surface-level sheen.
Photo: Laura Chouette / Unsplash
My skin looked juicier by week two. No major brightening miracles. The refill system is clever, but the outer bottle is still plastic.
Photo: Dominik Vanyi / Unsplash
A good hydrating serum wrapped in excellent marketing. The sustainability effort is a half-step — better than nothing, but don’t buy it just for that.