BALANCEFUL Control Serum
K-Beauty Sebum Rookie
Pros & cons.
- +Four independent sebum-control mechanisms working in parallel
- +4% niacinamide is well-dosed without tipping into irritation territory
- +Full 5D Cica complex keeps oily-skin treatment from feeling harsh
- +Seven forms of hyaluronic acid prevent the classic tight-skin rebound
- +Panthenol at 1.1% visibly buffers the capryloyl salicylic acid
- +Fragrance-free and genuinely tolerated by sensitive oily skin
- +Water-thin, non-tacky finish that layers cleanly under sunscreen
- +Strong value under $25 for this active density
- −Too lightweight to work as a standalone hydrator on dry skin
- −Contains fatty esters that may trigger fungal-acne-prone users
- −Sebum-reduction results plateau around the four-to-six-week mark
- −Shorter market history than Torriden's flagship DIVE IN line
- −Only available in a single 50ml size
The full review.
If you’ve wandered into any Olive Young in Seoul or scrolled Korean beauty TikTok in the last three years, you’ve run into Torriden. The brand’s DIVE IN Low Molecular Hyaluronic Acid Serum became the kind of runaway bestseller that turns a small indie into a category reference, largely because it did one thing — quiet, effective hydration — without any of the rose-gold dropper theatrics that define most of the shelf. The BALANCEFUL Control Serum is what happens when that same minimalist, barrier-first philosophy gets pointed at oily and combination skin, which historically has been treated by K-beauty (and Western beauty, for that matter) as a problem to be stripped rather than balanced.
And the formula reflects that intention. The first thing worth noticing on the INCI is that niacinamide is the fifth ingredient, at a confirmed 4%. That’s not the 10% you see on TikTok-famous treatment serums, and that is a deliberate choice. 4% is plenty to modulate sebum output, visibly refine pore appearance, and reinforce the barrier; 10% is where irritation reports start climbing. Torriden clearly decided that a dose that actually works for sensitive oily skin beats a dose that makes good marketing.
The second notable thing is that niacinamide isn’t doing the sebum-control job alone. Zinc PCA sits deeper in the formula, and it has its own modest but real body of in-vivo evidence — a commonly cited 28-day study at 1% showed statistically significant sebum reduction. Layered on top of that, capryloyl salicylic acid adds a lipophilic BHA derivative that’s gentler than standard salicylic acid but still keeps pore-lining sebum flowing smoothly. You end up with three independent mechanisms for oil control working in parallel, which is why reviewers tend to describe the mattifying effect as ‘real but not harsh.’
What prevents any of this from feeling punishing is the 5D Cica complex — Centella Asiatica extract plus all four of its isolated triterpenes (asiaticoside, madecassoside, asiatic acid, madecassic acid). This is worth taking seriously. Oily, acne-prone skin often sits in a low-grade inflamed state, and plenty of sebum-control actives ignore that context. Here, the calming load is doing meaningful work in the background, so the niacinamide and BHA can perform without dragging sensitive skin into flush territory. Panthenol at 11,000 parts per million — a notable 1.1% — further buffers the exfoliating edge.
And then, because this is still a Torriden product, there’s hydration. Seven forms of hyaluronic acid (crosspolymer, acetylated, hydrolyzed, potassium, sodium, plain, and zinc hydrolyzed) handle the classic failure mode of sebum-control serums, which is leaving your skin paradoxically tight and dehydrated. The multi-molecular approach means you get both surface-level water binding and slightly deeper penetration, so the serum feels quenching even as it’s nudging your oil production down.
On texture, this is classic essence-serum territory. It pours water-thin from the glass dropper, spreads into a clear film, and sinks in within about twenty seconds. There’s no tackiness, no whiteness, no slippery silicone feel. The finish is genuinely matte but not powdered — skin looks satin rather than flat. On first use, sensitive testers sometimes report a very brief, mild warmth from the capryloyl salicylic acid that fades within a minute. No purging has been widely reported, which tracks with the gentleness of the acid chosen.
Performance-wise, the honest timeline is: day one will not impress you. You’ll notice the finish and the lightness, but the sebum story takes about a week to begin showing, and the full effect — noticeably smaller-looking pores on the nose and forehead, less midday blotting — lands around the four-to-six-week mark. This is consistent with what the underlying actives actually do; anyone promising immediate pore-shrinking is selling astringent theatrics, not biology.
The limitations are real but specific. If your skin is genuinely dry rather than combination, this serum won’t give you the cushioned, plump feeling you’d get from the original BALANCEFUL Serum or DIVE IN. It is built to regulate, not to flood the skin with moisture. It’s also not fungal-acne safe because of the polyglyceryl-4 oleate and sorbitan stearate, so anyone with confirmed malassezia folliculitis should steer toward the plain BALANCEFUL Serum instead. And BALANCEFUL, as a line, doesn’t yet have the years of real-world data behind it that DIVE IN does — this serum launched in 2024, which is why our data confidence here sits at medium rather than high.
Value is where it earns its badge. Twenty-two dollars for a well-formulated 4% niacinamide serum with zinc PCA, capryloyl salicylic acid, a full 5D Cica complex, and seven forms of HA is a genuine bargain in a category where Western brands routinely charge double for half the active load. The 50ml bottle lasts two to three months with twice-daily use, which works out to under a dollar per week for a daily treatment-grade serum. That’s the kind of math that makes K-beauty worth paying attention to.
Who is this for?
People with oily or combination skin, especially sensitive variants, who are tired of sebum products that leave them tight, flaking, or red. Teenagers and early-twenties skin managing hormonal shine. Anyone who liked the original BALANCEFUL Serum but wanted a little more active muscle.
Who should skip?
Dry-skin users looking for a primary hydrator, anyone with confirmed fungal acne, and people who want aggressive, fast-visible pore minimization — this is a slow, steady serum, not a sledgehammer.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Water, Glycerin, Propanediol, Dipropylene Glycol, Niacinamide, 1,2-Hexanediol, Panthenol (11,000ppm), Centella Asiatica Extract, Madecassic Acid, Asiaticoside (3,610ppb), Asiatic Acid, Madecassoside, Allantoin, Swertia Japonica Extract, Nymphaea Caerulea Flower Extract, Lactobacillus Ferment, Althaea Rosea Flower Extract, Sodium Hyaluronate, Hydrolyzed Hyaluronic Acid, Hyaluronic Acid, Hydroxypropyltrimonium Hyaluronate, Potassium Hyaluronate, Sodium Hyaluronate Crosspolymer, Sodium Acetylated Hyaluronate, Zinc Hydrolyzed Hyaluronate, Calcium Pantothenate, Succinic Acid, Gluconic Acid, Capryloyl Salicylic Acid, Zinc PCA, Palmitoyl Dipeptide-7, Dipeptide-2, Dipotassium Glycyrrhizate, Pentylene Glycol, Sodium Stearoyl Glutamate, Acetyl Glucosamine, Glyceryl Glucoside, Isopentyldiol, 2,3-Butanediol, Octyldodecanol, Glyceryl Acrylate/Acrylic Acid Copolymer, PVM/MA Copolymer, Caproic Acid, Polyglyceryl-4 Oleate, Sorbitan Stearate
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
Three independently studied actives control sebum in this serum. Niacinamide has a large literature base for reducing sebum excretion rates; a 2006 British Journal of Dermatology study shows measurable sebum reduction at 2% and 4% topical concentrations over four weeks. Zinc PCA has in-vivo data showing statistically significant sebum-secretion reduction at 1% over 28 days. Capryloyl salicylic acid — also known as LHA — is a lipophilic salicylic acid derivative from L'Oréal research labs; its slower release profile exfoliates with less barrier disruption than unmodified salicylic acid. The interest in this formulation lies in the stack, not a single ingredient. Oily skin often involves inflammation or barrier compromise. Layering three sebum-modulating actives with a full 5D Cica complex (Centella Asiatica extract plus asiaticoside, madecassoside, asiatic acid, and madecassic acid) addresses both issues. Research supports the triterpenes in Centella for soothing TEWL-compromised skin and supporting barrier recovery, the state oil-control regimens often cause. Layered over seven molecular weights of hyaluronic acid, the product reduces sebum by mechanism rather than by stripping.
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists often recommend niacinamide at 2-5% for oily, acne-prone, or sensitive skin because the evidence is strong and irritation risk is low. Board-certified dermatologists generally favor formulations that combine sebum modulation with barrier support over stripping approaches, as stripped skin often enters a cycle of rebound oiliness and inflammation. Including a full Centella complex with niacinamide and capryloyl salicylic acid provides the layered, gentle approach often prescribed for patients with oily skin and reactivity or post-inflammatory redness. Dermatologists also view K-beauty formulations favorably when they avoid fragrance and essential oils, as this one does. For patients on prescription retinoids, most dermatologists advise alternating nights instead of using this serum on the same night as tretinoin.
Where it fits in your routine.
Apply three to four drops to clean, toned skin morning and evening. Pat gently until absorbed. Follow with a light moisturizer and, in the morning, broad-spectrum sunscreen; the capryloyl salicylic acid adds mild photosensitivity. New BHA users should start with three or four nights per week and reach daily use over two weeks. Do not layer this with high-strength retinoids, glycolic acid, or vitamin C at high concentration on the same night; alternate nights instead. Patch test on the jawline for 48 hours if you have a reactive history with niacinamide.
At roughly $22 for 50ml, the Control Serum is a strong value by any reasonable measure. Comparable Western serums with 4% niacinamide, a mild BHA derivative, and a genuine Cica complex typically sit in the $40-$60 range, often with less active density. The glass bottle and dropper elevate the unboxing past the usual K-beauty price point as well. The serum only comes in the one 50ml size, which lasts most users two to three months with twice-daily application. Given Torriden's still-emerging brand track record, the low entry price is appropriate — you're paying for a well-considered formulation, not a legacy clinical dossier.
This works for oily or combination skin — especially sensitive skin — that needs sebum control without the stripped, flaking feeling common in mattifying serums. It also suits people who liked Torriden's original BALANCEFUL Serum but want more active muscle against breakouts.
Dry-skin users needing a primary hydrator, anyone with diagnosed fungal acne (the fatty esters here can trigger malassezia), and people expecting dramatic overnight pore-shrinking. This serum works like compound interest rather than an aggressive spot fix.
Product details.
Clear, water-thin essence-serum that drinks in almost immediately
Fragrance-free with a faint botanical note from the plant extracts
Frosted glass bottle with a glass dropper — feels more intentional than most sub-$25 K-beauty serums
The first application feels like water. Niacinamide causes brief tightening, and capryloyl salicylic acid causes mild warmth on sensitive skin. Typical use reports no purging. Oil control shows by day 5-7.
Approximately 2-3 months with twice-daily application of 3-4 drops
12 months
All Year
The backstory.
Torriden built its reputation on the DIVE IN line's low-molecular hyaluronic acid serum, which became an Olive Young bestseller. BALANCEFUL was launched as a sibling line in 2024 specifically for oilier, combination skin that loved DIVE IN's minimalism but needed sebum control, and the Control Serum is the most active piece of that range.
About Torriden
Emerging Brand (2–5 years)Torriden launched in 2018 as a K-beauty brand focused on barrier-first formulations built around hyaluronic acid and Centella Asiatica. It built its reputation on the DIVE IN line and has since expanded with the BALANCEFUL range, earning a growing following but still operating without the decades-long clinical backing of legacy derm brands.
Common myths.
Sebum-control products dry your skin, which triggers more oil production.
This formula has seven forms of hyaluronic acid and over 1% panthenol. It reduces oil by modulating sebum pathways instead of stripping moisture, so rebound-oil concerns do not apply.
Niacinamide above 2% always irritates sensitive skin.
Cica, panthenol, and dipotassium glycyrrhizate buffer the 4% level. Early reviews show sensitive users generally tolerate it well.
FAQ.
What percentage of niacinamide is in the Torriden BALANCEFUL Control Serum?
4% niacinamide modulates sebum and pore appearance without hitting the 10% threshold where many users experience irritation. Torriden uses Cica and panthenol to keep this concentration tolerable.
Can I use the BALANCEFUL Control Serum with retinol?
You can, but not always in the same routine. The capryloyl salicylic acid in this serum provides mild exfoliation. Using it with a strong retinoid on the same night can irritate sensitive skin. Alternate nights is the safest approach.
Is this serum fungal acne safe?
Not strictly — the formula has Polyglyceryl-4 Oleate and sorbitan stearate. These can trigger malassezia-driven breakouts in people who react to fatty esters. If you have a fungal acne diagnosis, patch test first.
How does the Control Serum differ from the original BALANCEFUL Serum?
The original BALANCEFUL Serum focuses on calming and hydration. The Control Serum uses the same 5D Cica base but adds 4% niacinamide, zinc PCA, and capryloyl salicylic acid to manage sebum.
Does this serum cause purging?
Capryloyl salicylic acid is gentle; users rarely report purging. Most see gradual clearing instead of an initial flare. New BHA users should start 3-4 nights a week and build up.
Can I use this in the morning?
Yes — it layers well under sunscreen and its mattifying finish makes it a popular AM choice. Use a broad-spectrum SPF, as capryloyl salicylic acid adds mild photosensitivity.
Is Torriden cruelty-free and vegan?
Yes. Torriden does not test on animals, and this specific serum is vegan because it contains no animal-derived ingredients.
Community
What the community says.
"Several reviewers note noticeable reduction in midday oil"
"Many early adopters mention it doesn't sting broken-out skin"
"Lightweight, non-tacky finish is frequently cited"
"Some users find it insufficiently hydrating as a standalone"
"A few reviewers say the sebum control plateaus after a month"
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