This cleanser started in a kitchen, not a lab. The founders grew up watching their grandmother make face masks from whatever was in the fridge.
The real hook? It’s a family business that treats your face like a dinner plate — feed it good stuff. A press release would never admit they basically bottled a green smoothie and called it skincare.
It’s a $38 gel cleanser. I tried it because they claim it cleans without stripping — a line I’ve heard a thousand times.
Vegan & Leaping Bunny Certified
No animal testing, full stop.
Cold-Pressed Key Ingredients
Preserves the nutrients in the greens.
pH-Balanced
Won’t mess with your skin’s natural barrier.
It’s a salad bar for your sink. Kale, spinach, and green tea do the heavy lifting — antioxidants to fight daily grime and pollution. Not just marketing fluff.
- Kale: Fights free radicals
- Spinach: Rich in vitamins C, E, & A
- Green Tea: Calms inflammation
- Alfalfa: Aids in detoxification
The texture is a slick, bright green gel. It lathers into a light foam — feels clean, not squeaky. Smells like a fresh-cut lawn, in a good way.
After two weeks, my skin felt balanced. The surprise? It removed my light makeup (tinted moisturizer, mascara) better than I expected for a “gentle” formula.
My complexion looked clearer, more even. No tightness after washing. But it’s not a pore-purging miracle — blackheads didn’t vanish.
It’s a genuinely good, feel-good cleanser. Youth to the People nailed the ethos. Just don’t expect it to solve all your problems.