I bought Isntree Green Tea Fresh Toner to hydrate my dehydrated-oily skin. Now I’ve used it as a setting spray, a deodorant, and a midday face rinse.
The weirdest win? My boyfriend stole it for his post-shave burn. That’s when you know it’s not just another toner.
It’s a watery toner for $18-22. The brand claims it “controls sebum and soothes irritation.” I rolled my eyes—then bought a second bottle.
Hydration without stickiness
Absorbs in about 8 seconds. No tacky film.
Pores look smaller
Not magic—just less oil sitting on top. My makeup stays matte 2 hours longer.
Soothes redness instantly
I got a sunburn on my nose. This calmed it faster than aloe.
It’s 80% green tea water—not extract, not a drop. The rest is smart, not fancy. No fragrance, no alcohol, no nonsense.
- Green tea leaf water: antioxidant powerhouse that calms inflammation
- Panthenol: repairs barrier without clogging
- Hyaluronic acid: plumps without heaviness
- Allantoin: speeds up healing of breakouts and irritation
It’s like splashing your face with cold tea—thin, fresh, almost weightless. The first pump made me think, “This won’t do anything.” I was wrong.
Week three: My T-zone stopped producing enough oil to fry an egg. And I accidentally sprayed it on my armpits after shaving—zero sting, zero smell for hours. That’s not a marketing claim—that’s just true.
My redness dropped 40%. My pores didn’t disappear, but they stopped looking like craters. Breakouts healed faster—like 2 days instead of 5. It didn’t fix my deep wrinkles (obviously).
It’s not a miracle. It’s a stupidly versatile toner that does its job without drama—and then does three more jobs you didn’t ask for.