So I slapped the KraveBeauty Matcha Hemp Hydrating Cleanser on my face expecting a gentle hug—instead I got lab results that made me side-eye the “clean” sticker.
Turns out it contains *Cocamidopropyl Betaine*, a surfactant that can actually be *more* stripping than SLS for some people. Not exactly what you want from the “non-stripping” poster child.
This is a gel cleanser. Costs $28 for 5 oz. The whole pitch is “pH-balanced to 5.5”—but mine clocked at 5.8. Close, but not the flex they make it.
Matcha powder
It’s literally ground tea leaves. Gives you that green tint and a slight grit—like washing with a very polite scrub.
Hemp seed oil
In a *wash-off* product. So it’s basically on your face for 30 seconds max. Don’t expect deep moisture.
Oat kernel extract
The real MVP. Slightly soothing, but diluted enough that I didn’t feel it doing much.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
Hero ingredients are matcha (antioxidant) and hemp oil (linoleic acid)—but the formula leans on *Coco-Betaine* for foam, which is a known irritant for sensitive types. The oat extract tries to counter it, but it’s a light touch.
- Matcha powder: mild antioxidant, adds texture
- Hemp seed oil: linoleic acid, barely stays on skin
- Cocamidopropyl Betaine: foaming agent, can be drying
- Oat kernel extract: soothing, but low concentration
Photo: Kaeme / Unsplash
First pump: smells like a matcha latte from a hipster cafe. Texture is a thin gel—lathers into a frothy, almost soapy foam. Rinses clean in under 15 seconds, but my skin felt *tight* by the time I toweled off.
Week 3: I have combo-oily skin. It didn’t wreck my barrier, but I had to moisturize immediately. The surprise? It actually calmed a small breakout on my chin—maybe the matcha doing *something*.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
My pores looked slightly smaller (temporary—the oat probably plumped things). My redness stayed the same. No new breakouts, but no glow either. It’s a *fine* cleanser, not a savior.
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
It’s a solid cleanser for normal-to-oily skin, but the “non-stripping” claim is marketing fluff. My barrier survived—but barely.