I bought this to calm my chin breakout. Three days later, I sprayed it on my gym shoes and my cuticles. This bottle is unhinged in the best way.
The real flex? It’s hypochlorous acid — which sounds scary but is literally your immune system’s favorite molecule. And it dries in 8 seconds flat. No sticky face.
It’s a hypochlorous acid spray. $28 for 4 oz. Tower 28 Beauty claims it calms redness and kills acne bacteria. I bought it because I was desperate and it had good reviews on Reddit.
Acne soother
Spray on a fresh pimple before bed — it’s flat by morning. No burn, no dry patch.
Makeup refresher
Mist over powder makeup. It melts the cake without moving your foundation. Weird but true.
Gym bag deodorizer
Two sprays inside my sneakers after hot yoga. Smell gone. I’m not kidding.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
This is not a 20-ingredient smoothie. It’s three things: hypochlorous acid, water, salt. That’s it. And that’s why it works — no fragrance to irritate, no oils to clog.
- Hypochlorous acid: Kills bacteria on contact without stripping your barrier
- Water: Just clean, filtered — no fancy nonsense
- Sodium chloride: Salt. Stabilizes the formula so it doesn’t go bad in 3 weeks
- Electrolytes: Helps your skin actually absorb the mist vs. just sitting on top
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
It’s like spraying cool, clean water on your face. No scent. No sting. Zero residue. I expected a tingle — got nothing. That was suspicious at first. Then I realized it’s just… working quietly.
Week two: I stopped using my salicylic acid toner on active breakouts. This did the same job without making my cheeks peel. Surprising because I’m a “more actives = better” person. I was wrong.
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
Yes — but not for everything. My chin breakouts cleared in 4 days. My gym bag stopped smelling like a wet dog. My cuticles? Less angry. My under-eye concealer? Still creases. So it’s not magic.
Photo: Laura Chouette / Unsplash
Buy it for your face. Keep it for everything else. Just don’t expect it to set your makeup like a hairspray — it’s a refresher, not a sealer.