Everyone’s slathering on Saie Glowy Super Gel for that “glass skin” finish—but I smelled something off before I even squeezed a drop.
The brand screams “clean,” yet the label omits specific fragrance allergens. That’s not transparency—that’s a loophole.
It’s a liquid highlighter-meets-primer hybrid. $28 for 1 oz. The claim: “dewy, glowing skin without toxic ingredients.”
Gel-to-skin finish
Slides on like thin jelly, disappears in 20 seconds flat
Buildable shimmer
One pump = subtle; three = disco ball
“Clean” seal
EWG verified, no parabens, no phthalates—but that’s the easy part
Photo: Anna Evans / Unsplash
It’s packed with glycerin and aloe for hydration, plus mica for that strobe-light glow. But the preservative system uses phenoxyethanol and ethylhexylglycerin—safe in small doses, but not exactly “naked.”
- Glycerin: Plumps surface cells instantly
- Mica: Synthetic sparkle, not natural
- Phenoxyethanol: Common preservative, linked to irritation
- Fragrance (Parfum): Undisclosed mix, possible allergens
Photo: Mockup Free / Unsplash
First pump: smells like a faint floral bouquet—pleasant, but my nose twitched. Texture feels like liquid silk on fingers, but on cheeks? It stayed tacky for 3 full minutes before settling.
Week 2: broke out along my jawline. Not cystic, just tiny bumps. My skin hates mystery fragrance blends.
Photo: Tato Lopez / Unsplash
My skin looked lit from within for about 4 hours. Then the glow slid off into my smile lines. No lasting hydration change—just temporary shimmer.
Photo: Glow Repose / Unsplash
It’s a decent highlighter wrapped in a greenwashed bow. The glow is real—but the “clean” claim doesn’t hold up under a magnifying glass.