Tatcha The Indigo Cream Reformulated: Better or Worse?

Reformulation Alert
Tatcha quietly swapped key ingredients in its cult-favorite Indigo Cream — fans are split on the new version.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🔬They changed the formula. Again.

Tatcha quietly swapped out key ingredients in The Indigo Cream — and fans are losing it on Reddit. The old version was a holy grail for sensitive skin types. The new one? It’s lighter, but something’s missing.

The real issue: they removed the urea. That’s the ingredient that made this cream actually repair skin barrier damage. Without it, this is just another expensive moisturizer with a pretty jar.

2.⚠️What actually is this thing

$135 for 1.7 oz. Tatcha claims it’s a “deep overnight repair cream” that calms redness and strengthens the moisture barrier. I bought it because I wanted a luxury version of La Roche-Posay Cicaplast — something that actually healed my irritated cheeks.

1

Indigo Extract

Supposedly calms inflammation — feels more like a marketing flex than a real change

2

Colloidal Oatmeal

This is the actual workhorse. Soothes on contact.

Skin barrier support, but they’re in almost every mid-range moisturizer now

woman putting makeup in front of mirror

Photo: kevin laminto / Unsplash

3.🧴Ingredients that actually matter

The old formula had urea + squalane + indigo. The new one swaps urea for shea butter and squalane for a lighter ester. It’s more cosmetically elegant — but less reparative. Shea butter sits on top of skin; urea penetrates.

  • Urea (old formula): Deeply exfoliates and hydrates — now gone
  • Shea Butter (new formula): Smooths surface texture but doesn’t repair
  • Colloidal Oatmeal: Still there — thank god
  • Squalane: Replaced with a synthetic ester — cheaper, less effective
woman in white tank top

Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash

4.📝Texture & reality check

New formula feels like a gel-cream hybrid. It sinks in within 20 seconds — no greasy film. First night I was impressed. It sits beautifully under sunscreen. No pilling.

Week 3: my redness came back. The old version kept my cheeks calm through winter wind. This one feels like a nice daytime moisturizer — not a reparative treatment. If you have actual rosacea or eczema, skip it.

💡

One Thing: Use this as a day cream, not an overnight treatment. Layer a heavier balm (like Cicaplast) on top at night if you need real repair.
three makeup brushes on top of compact powders

Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash

5.💬Did it actually do anything?

My skin felt softer in the morning — but that’s the shea butter, not long-term repair. The redness reduction was minimal compared to the old formula. No breakouts, but no “wow” either.

Buy if
You want a luxe, lightweight moisturizer that feels expensive and sits well under makeup
⏭️

Skip if
You have reactive, red, or compromised skin — the old formula was actually better
💰

Worth it?
Not at $135. Get the travel size ($25) first — or buy the old formula on eBay while it lasts.
6.Final call

Tatcha made a prettier, less effective cream. If you want luxury, it’s fine. If you want results, skip the reformulation and find something with urea.

5.5/10
Pretty jar, weaker formula
🛍️

Where to Buy: Sephora or Tatcha directly. Grab the mini first — it’s $25 and you’ll know in a week if this is for you.