Every influencer has this in their bag. They call it “clean beauty.” But Saie uses a preservative that’s technically allowed in “clean” formulas — and it’s not as innocent as they want you to think.
The real issue? Phenoxyethanol. It’s in 80% of “natural” tints because it’s cheap and stable. But it’s also a known skin irritant with a growing list of dermatologists side-eyeing it. Nobody talks about that in the #glowup posts.
It’s a tinted moisturizer with SPF 30. $38 for 1 oz. The claim: “skin-like finish with clean ingredients.” I tried it because I wanted to believe a glowy tint could be both safe and good.
Dewy finish
Sits shiny, not wet — like you just did a face mask, not a grease slick
Sheer coverage
Hides redness, shows freckles. You’ll still see your dark circles
SPF 30 zinc
Mineral-only. No chemical filters. White cast if you’re medium+ skin
Photo: Nick Noel / Unsplash
Hero: squalane (hydration) and zinc oxide (protection). But the third ingredient is coconut alkanes — a drying alcohol that cancels out the dewy vibe. The preservative system is phenoxyethanol + ethylhexylglycerin. “Clean” by marketing standards, not by derm standards.
- Squalane: Locks moisture for 6+ hours, not greasy
- Zinc oxide: SPF 30, but leaves white cast on tan skin
- Coconut alkanes: Drying alcohol — defeats the glow purpose
- Phenoxyethanol: Common preservative, linked to irritation in sensitive skin
Photo: Mockup Free / Unsplash
First pump: watery, almost runny. Spreads in 5 seconds, absorbs in 30. Smells like nothing — no fake citrus. On my combo skin, it sat shiny for 2 hours, then settled into a weird dry patch on my nose by hour 4.
Week 3: I stopped using it daily. The “clean” label made me feel safe, but my skin actually got more congested. Tiny bumps on my chin. Could be the coconut alkanes. Could be me. But my tint shouldn’t make me question my skincare routine.
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
My skin looked dewy for 2 hours, then dry. The “clean” label didn’t protect me from irritation. It’s fine for a quick errand, not a full day.
Photo: Siora Photography / Unsplash
It’s a decent tint with a marketing problem. Don’t buy it because it’s “clean.” Buy it if you like a sheer, shiny finish and don’t mind risking irritation. I won’t repurchase — my skin prefers boring drugstore stuff that doesn’t lie about what it is.