Is Typology Tinted Serum Greenwashing? Ingredient Deep Dive

Greenwashing Check
Typology’s minimalist tinted serum claims only 11 ingredients — but those ingredients reveal a hidden synthetic dye and a marketing sleight of hand.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
🔍 **The 11-Ingredient Illusion**

1.🔍Minimalist Myth

Typology brags about 11 ingredients. What they don’t tell you? Ingredient #10 is CI 77891 — titanium dioxide. That’s not a natural pigment. It’s a synthetic white dye used in sunscreen and paint.

The real kicker: they market this as “clean” while using a particle that can leave a ghostly cast on deeper skin tones. The minimalism is marketing, not purity.

🧪 **What You’re Actually Buying**

2.🧪The Price of Clean

It’s $28 for 1 fl oz. A tinted serum that claims to even skin tone without makeup. I bit because the bottle looks like a chic apothecary find.

1

Texture

Watery, almost like a thin lotion — not a heavy foundation

2

Shade Range

Four shades. Four. For “universal” skin. That’s a joke.

3

SPF

None. Zero sun protection. For a daytime product, that’s reckless.

woman in gray sweater holding lipstick

Photo: Daria Gordova / Unsplash

🔬 **Ingredient Reality Check**

3.🔬The Good, The Bad, The Paint

Hero ingredients are squalane (hydration) and zinc oxide (anti-inflammatory). But the second ingredient is water — filler. And that titanium dioxide? It’s not just color. It’s a physical UV filter that does nothing here because there’s not enough to protect you.

  • Squalane: Lightweight moisture, not greasy
  • Zinc Oxide: Calms redness, but low concentration
  • Titanium Dioxide: Synthetic white pigment, not natural
  • Glycerin: Humectant, pulls water to skin
three makeup brushes on top of compact powders

Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash

📝 **Texture & Truth**

4.📝First Squeeze, Real Talk

Smells like nothing — which is good. Absorbs in 20 seconds. Leaves a slight tackiness that makeup grips onto. On fair skin, it’s a subtle glow. On me (medium-tan), it’s a grayish sheen. Not cute.

Week two: broke out on my chin. Could be coincidence. Could be the titanium dioxide clogging pores. I’m not convinced it’s worth the risk.

💡

One Thing: Mix one drop with your moisturizer to sheer it out — stops the ghost face and stretches the bottle
the contents of a travel bag laid out on a table

Photo: Tato Lopez / Unsplash

💎 **Did It Actually Work?**

5.💎Real Results, No Fluff

Redness looked slightly calmed after two weeks. But the “even tone” claim? Barely noticeable. Dark spots stayed dark. And the finish oxidized to a weird yellow on my friend’s olive skin.

Buy if
You’re fair, hate makeup, and want a barely-there veil
⏭️

Skip if
You have medium-deep skin or need actual coverage
💰

Worth it?
Not really. $28 for a glorified moisturizer that can’t protect you from the sun
woman in white tank top

Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash

⚠️ **Final Call**

6.⚠️Greenwashing or Genius?

Typology’s tinted serum is clever marketing wrapped in a clean label. The 11-ingredient flex hides a synthetic dye and zero sun protection. It’s not evil — but it’s not honest.

4.5/10
Clean look, dirty truth
🛍️

Where to Buy: Typology’s site only — but try the travel size first. Your wallet will thank you.