🌿 What is Green Tea Extract?
Green Tea Extract is a botanical active rich in polyphenols (especially catechins like EGCG), plus flavonols, caffeine, and amino acids (L‑theanine). In skin care it’s prized for antioxidant, anti‑inflammatory, oil‑regulating, soothing, and photo‑protective benefits.
Source?
Leaves of Camellia sinensis processed as green tea; cosmetic extracts are typically water/glycol extracts or standardized EGCG fractions.
🏺 Origins in Skincare
Traditional medicine used green tea for calming and wound care. Dermatology research in the 1990s–2000s linked catechins to UV protection, anti‑inflammation, and MMP (collagenase) inhibition, after which it became a mainstay in serums, essences, and sun‑adjacent care.
<Top 5 Benefits of Green Tea Extract (Summary)>
1) Antioxidant & anti‑photoaging (ROS/MMPs ↓)
2) Redness & irritation calming (pro‑inflammatory cytokines ↓)
3) Sebum moderation & acne support (5‑α‑reductase/bioburden ↓)
4) Texture & firmness support (collagen‑sparing, elasticity maintenance)
5) Barrier comfort (TEWL ↓, hydration feel ↑)
🔬 Mechanism of Action
- Antioxidant shield: EGCG scavenges ROS and down‑regulates NF‑κB, curbing oxidative stress and inflammation.
- Anti‑photoaging: Inhibits MMP‑1/3 (collagen/elastin‑degrading enzymes) induced by UV, helping preserve firmness.
- Sebum & acne care: Modulates 5‑α‑reductase and has anti‑microbial action against acne‑related bacteria → helps shine, congestion, and inflammatory lesions.
- Soothing/redness: Lowers pro‑inflammatory cytokines (IL‑1β, TNF‑α), visibly calming flushed, reactive skin.
- Barrier assist: Polyphenols + amino acids support TEWL reduction and barrier comfort.
Effect by Concentration
(Concentration / Observed Benefits)
- 0.2–1% / baseline antioxidant/soothing in toners.
- 1–3% / visible redness‑calming, oil moderation in serums/lotions.
- 3–5%+ / stronger photoprotection support, texture tone‑up.
- EGCG as a single active / ~0.1–2% (needs stabilization; pH ~4–5 and chelators/antioxidants help).
Common Formats
- Toners/Essences : 0.5–5% extract or high‑percentage green tea water (distillate).
- Serums/Creams: 1–3% extract : some lines use 50–90% tea water as base.
- Masks/Gels : 1–5% extract great for after‑sun/calming.
<Top 5 Skincare Products Infused with Green Tea Extract Extract>
1. Isntree Green Tea Fresh Toner
Content : 80%
Country : KR
2. Beauty of Joseon Calming Serum: Green Tea + Panthenol
Content : 76%
Country : KR
3. Benton Deep Green Tea Toner
Content : 53%
Country : KR
4. Amorepacific Vintage Single Extract Essence
Content : 100%
Country : KR
5. TONYMOLY The Chok Chok Green Tea Watery Cream
Content : 63%
Country : KR
※ In many K-beauty products, claims like “80% green tea water” or “63% fermented green tea extract” usually refer to replacing the water phase with green tea water or an extract solution. This figure represents the solvent (base) ratio, not the actual active polyphenol content.
Clinical Signals
Antioxidant/photoprotection: Topical green tea polyphenols reduce UV‑induced erythema and MMP expression (supporting anti‑photoaging).
Acne/sebum: Green‑tea/EGCG creams have shown reduced sebum output and improvement in inflammatory lesions in small clinicals.
Redness/comfort: Measurable drops in erythema scores and TEWL improvements in barrier‑stressed skin.
Good chart ideas: Before/after redness bars; sebum graph trending down; MMP/ROS pathway diagram.
Then vs Now
Then: Generic “green tea” in toners for freshness.
Now: Standardized catechin content, fermented teas for bio‑availability, stabilized EGCG in low‑pH systems, and sun‑adjacent routines (under SPF, after sun).
Pro Tips (formulation & use)
Pair with niacinamide/HA/ceramides for barrier synergy.
Layer under SPF for an antioxidant “under‑shield.”
If you’re oily/acne‑prone, look for EGCG‑forward formulas.
Sensitive skin? Choose fragrance‑free, pH‑appropriate (≈5) green tea serums.
EGCG is finicky opaque or air‑restrictive packaging helps stability.
📚 References
Katiyar SK. Green tea polyphenols and photoimmunology – anti‑photoaging mechanisms.
Mahmood & Akhtar. Green tea topical preparations for sebum and acne improvement.
Elmets et al. Topical green tea polyphenols reduce UV damage in human skin.
Chan et al. EGCG: anti‑inflammatory, anti‑androgenic implications for acne.
Heinrich et al. Plant polyphenols and skin aging biomarkers (MMPs/oxidative stress).
Cosmetic science reviews on EGCG stabilization and delivery (low‑pH, chelators).