Typology built its whole brand on French-girl minimalism and “less is better.” So why does their Tinted Serum contain phenoxyethanol — a preservative the EU just reclassified as toxic for repeated oral intake? Not a dealbreaker for everyone, but for a brand that screams *clean*, it’s… awkward.
The real issue isn’t safety — it’s the gap between the marketing and the ingredient deck. Feels a little greenwash-y when you read the fine print.
🧴 **What You’re Actually Buying**
It’s a lightweight tinted serum, not a foundation. 30ml for €28. Claims: “natural finish, clean ingredients, evens skin tone.” I bought it because the shade range actually goes pale enough for my translucent vampire complexion.
9 shades
Not bad for a French brand — but the undertones run yellow. Fair warning if you’re pink.
SPF 25
Zinc-based. No white cast. Actually decent.
Glass dropper bottle
Looks chic. Gets messy by week two. Dropper + tint = stained countertops.
Photo: Christian Agbede / Unsplash
🔬 **Ingredient Reality Check**
Hero ingredients: squalane (hydration), zinc oxide (SPF), and… phenoxyethanol (preservative). The first two are lovely. The third is the elephant in the room — it’s in 80% of “natural” products, but Typology marketed itself as *beyond* that.
- Squalane: actually hydrates, doesn’t pill
- Zinc oxide: mineral SPF that doesn’t ghost you
- Phenoxyethanol: controversial preservative, EU flagged
- Glycerin: fine, does its job
Photo: Clarissa Watson / Unsplash
⚖️ **Texture & Two-Week Truth**
First pump: watery, almost runny. Blends in 15 seconds — like a tinted moisturizer that forgot it was tinted. Zero tackiness. My combo skin didn’t revolt.
Week two: I stopped reaching for it. Coverage is so light it barely evens redness. And the shade oxidized slightly darker by midday. Not a good look on Zoom calls.
📋 **Real Results**
Skin looked slightly more even. No breakouts. But also no “wow” moment. It’s a $28 tinted serum that performs like a $28 tinted serum — not a miracle, not a scam.
✅ **Final Call**
It’s a fine everyday tint — but don’t buy the “clean” hype. Buy it for the SPF and the 15-second blend.