Everyone’s obsessed with this kale-and-spinach cleanser. But is it just a pretty, green bottle?
The real question: does its “superfood” marketing hold up, or is it just greenwashing in gel form?
It’s a $38 gel cleanser from Youth to the People. The claim? That kale and spinach can clean your pores. Honestly, I tried it because I was bored of my old one.
Vegan & Cruelty-Free
Certified by Leaping Bunny — a legit standard.
Recyclable Packaging
The bottle is 100% post-consumer recycled plastic.
Cold-Pressed Blend
They use a cold-pressed juice of the key greens.
Photo: rosario janza / Unsplash
The hero ingredients are kale, spinach, and green tea. They’re antioxidants — great for fighting environmental stressors. But they rinse off. Their real job here is calming, not deep-cleaning.
- Kale Extract: Fights free radicals (but you rinse it off)
- Spinach Extract: Provides vitamins C, E, & K
- Green Tea: Soothes and reduces redness
- Alfalfa: A mild, vitamin-rich exfoliant
Photo: pmv chamara / Unsplash
It’s a slick, emerald gel that lathers into a thin foam. Smells like a fresh-cut lawn — in a good, not-perfumey way.
After two weeks, my skin felt balanced. Not stripped. The surprise? It removed my light makeup, but my sunscreen needed a double cleanse.
Photo: Renaldo Matamoro / Unsplash
My complexion looked clearer, calmer. No tightness. But it didn’t magically shrink pores or cure breakouts. It’s a great maintenance cleanser.
Photo: Felipe Vieira / Unsplash
It’s not a miracle. But it’s a genuinely solid, feel-good formula. The green credentials are real, not just marketing fluff.