Is Typology Tinted Serum Clean? Ingredient Investigation

Greenwashing Check
Typology promises radical transparency—but a closer look at its tinted serum reveals a cloud of synthetic fillers and no SPF.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🔍The Transparency Trap

Typology’s whole thing is “radical transparency” — they literally put the percentage of each ingredient on the bottle. So why does their Tinted Serum feel like it’s hiding something?

Because the first ingredient is water. Then glycerin. Then a cocktail of synthetic thickeners. No SPF. For $32, you’re paying for a philosophy, not protection.

2.🧴What You Actually Get

It’s a lightweight, slightly-pigmented fluid. Typology calls it a “tinted serum” — but it’s really a sheer foundation with extra steps. $32 for 30ml. The claim that hooked me: “clean ingredients, zero compromises.”

1

Shade range

Three shades. Three. For a “universal” tint that’s actually just beige, warm beige, and slightly darker beige.

2

Texture

Watery. Almost runny. Like a thin lotion that disappeared before I could blend it.

3

Finish

Dewy in a way that reads “oily” by hour 3 — not glowy.

white and blue plastic bottles on table

Photo: Angelina / Unsplash

3.📋The Fine Print

The ingredients list is short, which I usually love. But “clean” here means “no preservatives” — which also means it expires fast. Like, 6 months fast. The hero ingredients are zinc oxide for oil control and a drop of vitamin C — but it’s ascorbyl glucoside, a derivative that barely penetrates.

  • Water: Filler, makes it feel hydrating but does nothing
  • Glycerin: Standard humectant, nothing special
  • Zinc Oxide: Actually helps with shine — but no SPF rating
  • Ascorbyl Glucoside: Vitamin C derivative, but too low concentration to brighten
4.⚠️The Wear Test

First pump: smells like nothing. Absorbs in 5 seconds — and I mean *disappears*. No coverage. Just a faint veil of color that evens out nothing. On dry skin, it clung to every flake. On oily skin, it slid off by lunch.

Week 2: I started mixing it with my moisturizer just to make it last longer. That’s when I realized — it’s not a serum. It’s a tinted moisturizer pretending to be sophisticated.

💡

One Thing: Apply with fingers, not a brush. The heat helps it blend before it evaporates — you have about 8 seconds.
5.🔬Real Talk, Real Results

My skin looked marginally more even. That’s it. No glow. No hydration boost. No “skin-like” finish — just a sheer veil that reminded me I was wearing something. Pores looked the same. Redness still peeked through.

Buy if
You want a barely-there tint and don’t care about sun protection or coverage.
⏭️

Skip if
You have redness, acne, or any skin concern that needs actual concealing.
💰

Worth it?
Not really. $32 for 30ml of glorified tinted water. Drugstore does this better.
6.💡Bottom Line

Typology’s Tinted Serum is clean in the way a glass of tap water is clean — technically pure, but also boring and kinda useless. If you want *actual* transparency, look at a formula that does more than just sit on your face.

5.2/10
Clean but forgettable tinted water
🛍️

Where to Buy: Typology’s website only — but honestly? Try a travel size first. You’ll use it up before it expires.