That kale smoothie of a cleanser everyone swears by? I finally checked the label.
The real question isn’t if it works—it’s if the “superfood” branding is just a very expensive garnish.
It’s a $38 gel cleanser from Youth to the People. The claim? That kale, spinach, and green tea can clean your face as well as they fuel your body.
Vegan & Cruelty-Free
Standard for a brand at this price point.
Recycled Packaging
The bottle is 100% post-consumer recycled plastic—their best feature.
Cold-Pressed
They cold-press the kale and spinach, which supposedly preserves antioxidants.
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
The hero ingredients sound like a salad. But a cleanser rinses off in 60 seconds—antioxidant contact time is minimal. The real workhorses are the surfactants.
- Kale Extract: Provides vitamins, but rinse-off benefit is debatable
- Spinach Extract: Same story as the kale
- Green Tea: Offers some antioxidant protection
- Coco-Betaine: The gentle surfactant that actually cleanses
Photo: Sonia Roselli / Unsplash
It’s a slick, bright green gel that smells like a health food store—herbal, not sweet. Lathers into a light, non-stripping foam. Skin feels clean, not squeaky.
After two weeks, I noticed it never left my tight or dry. But my blackheads didn’t budge. It’s a maintainer, not a transformer.
My complexion stayed balanced and calm. Zero irritation. But it didn’t magically clarify or brighten like the hype suggests.
It’s a great cleanser wrapped in exceptional marketing. Not a scam, but the “superfood” angle is mostly vibes.