DIVE-IN Cleansing Foam
K-Beauty Gentle Cleanser MVP
Pros & cons.
- +Amino acid surfactant base tolerates sensitive skin well
- +High-position glycerin and substantive HA fractions deposit during the wash
- +Genuinely no post-wash tightness, which most foam cleansers can't deliver
- +Pre-whipped pump format saves routine time
- +Fragrance-free, alcohol-free, essential-oil-free
- +Fungal-acne safe and low comedogenic risk
- +Thoroughly positive real-world feedback over 3+ years on market
- −Not strong enough for heavy waterproof makeup as a solo cleanser
- −Only one size offered — no trial option for first-time buyers
- −Pump bottle can dispense more product than needed in one press
- −Doesn't produce the dramatic foam volume some users expect
- −Some oily-skinned users may find it insufficiently deep-cleaning
The full review.
About Torriden
Torriden was essentially a one-product brand in 2021 — the DIVE-IN Low Molecular Hyaluronic Acid Serum that shot up the Olive Young rankings and gave the brand a technical narrative around multi-weight hyaluronic acid. The question for any single-product brand is always what happens next, and the answer for most of them is a predictable expansion into hyped adjacent categories without anything new to say. Torriden took a more interesting route. They looked at their technical story — that the eight-form HA architecture would deliver better hydration than single-weight formulas — and asked whether that story could work in a cleanser, which is the least likely category for hyaluronic acid to do anything useful because most of it washes down the drain. The DIVE-IN Cleansing Foam is what happened when they tried to answer that question properly.
Texture
The application experience is what you want from a daily cleanser. The pump delivers pre-whipped foam, which eliminates the step of working a cream or gel into a lather in your palms and saves a surprising amount of time on a morning routine. The foam distributes easily across damp skin, feels cushioned rather than bubbly, and rinses cleanly without residue. Post-wash, the skin feels hydrated and comfortable rather than tight. For users coming from harsher cleansers, the change is immediate and noticeable — you can feel it on day one.
Scent
The formula is fragrance-free, alcohol-free, and essential-oil-free, which is a big deal for sensitive skin users who have been burned by cleansers with irritating botanical extracts.
Best for
The realistic performance profile: this is an excellent everyday cleanser for removing sweat, sebum, chemical sunscreen, and light makeup. It’s not a heavy-duty makeup remover, and trying to use it solo on a full face of waterproof foundation will leave residue. The intended use is as the second step of a double cleanse (after an oil cleanser) or as a standalone cleanser for users who don’t wear heavy makeup. As a first-step morning cleanser, it’s ideal — non-stripping enough to use on clean overnight skin without leaving you feeling over-washed.
Works for
The suitability profile is one of the widest in the category. Dry and dehydrated skin benefits most from the humectant layering. Sensitive skin tolerates it because of the amino acid surfactants and the absence of fragrance. Combination skin gets adequate cleansing without the oil stripping that triggers rebound sebum. Oily skin gets a milder clean than a sulfate cleanser would deliver, which some oily-skinned users will appreciate and others will find insufficient — people with heavy sebum who feel unclean unless a cleanser squeaks may prefer a different product. For acne-prone skin, the formula is fungal-acne-safe and low on comedogenic risk, which makes it a reasonable choice for barrier-damaged acne patients who have been stripped by harsher products.
Not ideal for
Users who prefer the squeaky post-wash feel of sulfate cleansers. Anyone who wears heavy waterproof makeup and wants a single-step cleansing solution. Anyone who finds premium-priced cleansers hard to justify when drugstore alternatives exist.
Who Should Buy
Users with dry, dehydrated, sensitive, or combination skin who want a daily cleanser that doesn’t strip the barrier. Anyone transitioning from a drying foam cleanser to something gentler. Fans of the DIVE-IN serum who want to extend the Torriden routine into their cleansing step.
Common Complaints
The most common complaint about foam cleansers generally.
Pairs Well With
The intended use is as the second step of a double cleanse (after an oil cleanser)
Conflicts With
Anyone who wears heavy waterproof makeup and wants a single-step cleansing solution.
Value
Value is fair. At $17 for 150ml, this works out to roughly $0.11 per ml — more than drugstore cleansers but less than premium Western alternatives with similar surfactant profiles. The 150ml size lasts approximately 3-4 months with twice-daily use, giving it a reasonable long-term cost of around $5-6 per month. There’s only one size offered, which simplifies the purchase but gives users no trial-size option. For first-time Torriden buyers, the single-product commitment is modest, and the brand’s 2022 launch of this specific cleanser means there’s enough review history (thousands of user reviews across retailers) to give buyers confidence before committing.
About Torriden
Torriden as a brand is worth addressing honestly. It’s still a relatively new brand — founded in 2021 — and it doesn’t have the decades of clinical validation that a legacy pharmacy brand brings. What it has is a coherent technical story, a track record of delivering on the hydration angle specifically, and a growing base of genuinely positive user feedback. For a gentle cleanser, where the main question is whether the surfactant choice is sound and the formula is non-stripping, the brand’s track record is plenty of validation. The price reflects reasonable rather than inflated positioning.
Formula
The formulation choices tell you what they got right. The surfactant base is entirely amino acid derived — sodium cocoyl glycinate and sodium lauroyl glutamate, both sitting at positions 3 and 4 on the INCI, with no sulfates anywhere in the formula. These are the surfactants that K-beauty brands and premium dermatology brands have converged on for gentle cleansing because they clean effectively without stripping the barrier, and they tolerate daily twice-a-day use in a way that SLS simply can’t. That single decision is the reason this cleanser doesn’t leave your face feeling tight and squeaky, which is the most common complaint about foam cleansers generally.
Sitting on top of the amino acid surfactant base is glycerin at position 2 — meaning a high concentration, likely 10-20% — and then the eight-form hyaluronic acid stack. This is where the rinse-off engineering gets interesting. The challenge with HA in a cleanser is that most of it does wash away, which is why plenty of brands put it in their cleansers for marketing purposes without any real substantive effect. Torriden’s approach is to include the forms of HA that actually stick. The crosspolymer forms a film on the skin that doesn’t fully rinse off. The hydrolyzed fragments are small enough to deposit during the wash and remain after rinse. Combined with the glycerin layer, this produces a genuinely hydrated post-wash feel rather than a marketing-claim version of one.
The supporting cast rounds out the gentle-cleanser design. Panthenol and allantoin sit mid-INCI and contribute active soothing, which matters more than people realize for products used twice a day on the face. Trehalose, witch hazel extract at a trace level, green tea, chamomile, and malachite extract add the usual K-beauty supporting layer. The preservative system (potassium benzoate, 1,2-hexanediol, ethylhexylglycerin) is modern and well-tolerated.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list · pH 5.5
Water, Glycerin, Sodium Cocoyl Glycinate, Sodium Lauroyl Glutamate, Sodium Hyaluronate, Hyaluronic Acid, Hydrolyzed Hyaluronic Acid, Sodium Acetylated Hyaluronate, Hydroxypropyltrimonium Hyaluronate, Hydrolyzed Sodium Hyaluronate, Sodium Hyaluronate Crosspolymer, Potassium Hyaluronate, Panthenol, Allantoin, Trehalose, Tocopherol, Hamamelis Virginiana Extract, Camellia Sinensis Leaf Extract, Chamomilla Recutita Extract, Butylene Glycol, Dipropylene Glycol, Hydroxypropyl Starch Phosphate, Glyceryl Stearate SE, Potassium Benzoate, Sodium Chloride, Polyquaternium-67, Sodium Acetate, 1,2-Hexanediol, Citric Acid, Ethylhexylglycerin, Disodium EDTA, Malachite Extract
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
Cleansers rely on two metrics: soil removal efficacy and skin barrier impact. This formula uses specific surfactants to excel at both. Dermatological literature shows amino acid surfactants like sodium cocoyl glycinate and sodium lauroyl glutamate cause less irritation than alkyl sulfates (SLS, SLES) while cleansing well for daily use. This works through surfactant-protein interactions; amino acid surfactants interact less aggressively with the stratum corneum's natural moisturizing factor, which preserves barrier function during washing. The hydration claim depends on humectant deposition. Glycerin at 10-20% concentrations in rinse-off formulas deposits enough on the skin post-rinse to reduce transepidermal water loss compared to a plain water wash. The hyaluronic acid fraction is more complex. Low-molecular-weight HA and hydrolyzed HA deposit during the wash, though less remains than in a leave-on product. The sodium hyaluronate crosspolymer Torriden uses forms a substantive film that survives rinsing better than free HA, making this cleanser's hydration claim more credible than most. Panthenol and allantoin at mid-INCI positions provide documented soothing effects through modest deposition. Overall, the science supports the key mechanisms: gentle cleansing, humectant deposition, and barrier protection.
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists often recommend amino acid surfactant-based cleansers for patients with dry skin, sensitive skin, rosacea, eczema, or compromised barrier function; this cleanser fits that recommendation. Board-certified dermatologists note that surfactant choice is the most important factor in cleanser selection, and they strongly prefer fragrance-free, sulfate-free options for patients with reactivity history. The glycerin concentration and the substantive HA fraction align with dermatological guidance for hydrating cleansers. The main caution dermatologists flag is that hydrating foam cleansers do not substitute for makeup removers. Patients wearing heavy sunscreen or waterproof makeup should use an oil cleanser first, then use this product as the second cleansing step.
Where it fits in your routine.
Apply 1-2 pumps of pre-whipped foam to damp fingertips or a damp face. Massage the skin for 30-60 seconds, targeting sunscreen or sebum buildup. Rinse with lukewarm water. Pat dry with a clean towel and use your normal routine. Use twice daily: as the second step of a double cleanse in the evening, or as a standalone cleanser in the morning. Do not use very hot water; it reduces foam volume and increases barrier stress regardless of the surfactant choice.
At $17 for 150ml, this cleanser is upper-mid tier for K-beauty gentle cleansers. It costs more than drugstore Korean options but less than premium Western dermatology brands with comparable surfactant profiles. Only one size exists, so there is no travel option or trial-size entry point for hesitant first-time buyers. The bottle lasts about 3-4 months with twice-daily use. This costs roughly $5-6 per month of daily cleansing, a reasonable long-term cost. For existing Torriden fans, this purchase easily extends their routine. For first-time buyers, three-plus years of real-world feedback (several thousand reviews across retailers) provides enough confidence to commit without a trial. The price reflects fair rather than premium positioning for this formulation quality.
Buy this for dry, dehydrated, sensitive, or combination skin if you want a gentle daily cleanser that protects the barrier. It works well for users switching from drying foam or sulfate cleansers. It also fits the DIVE-IN serum routine for fans who want to add Torriden to their cleansing step.
Skip this if you like the squeaky feel of sulfate cleansers, use heavy waterproof makeup and want a single-step cleanser, or prefer a $5 drugstore cleanser over the amino acid surfactant upgrade.
Product details.
Unscented
Pump bottle dispenses pre-whipped foam with every press Finish non-strippingcushionedhydrated
The first wash feels immediately non-tight, which shows the cleanser is gentle. The amino acid surfactants do not strip the skin. Glycerin-and-HA deposition leaves a cushioned, hydrated finish after rinsing. Users switching from harsher foam cleansers often notice the difference within the first few days when their skin stops feeling over-washed.
Approximately 3-4 months with twice-daily face application
12 months
All Year
The backstory.
Torriden launched the DIVE-IN Cleansing Foam in 2022 as a line extension of its breakout HA serum. The brand's technical story was that the serum's 8-form hyaluronic acid layering could work in rinse-off products if paired with the right surfactant choice, and the cleanser was the proof of concept. It quickly became one of the better-reviewed gentle foam cleansers in the K-beauty category.
About Torriden
Emerging Brand (2–5 years)Torriden launched in 2021, gaining fame for the DIVE-IN line's multi-weight hyaluronic acid system. The serum is an Olive Young hit, and the cleanser applies that HA-layering philosophy to a rinse-off format. The brand has strong K-beauty retail momentum but lacks long-term independent clinical validation.
Common myths.
Hyaluronic acid in a cleanser just washes down the drain.
Most of it works—but the film-forming HA crosspolymer and the hydrolyzed fractions deposit on the skin during the wash and stay after rinsing. Combined with glycerin at a high INCI position, this makes the cleanser feel hydrating after washing.
Foam cleansers are always more drying than creams or gels.
Surfactant choice matters more than texture. A foam cleanser using amino acid surfactants is often gentler than a gel cleanser using sulfates. Most foam cleansers use harsh foaming agents, not the foam itself.
FAQ.
Does the Torriden DIVE-IN Cleansing Foam remove sunscreen?
Yes, it removes chemical sunscreens and light mineral sunscreens well as the second step of a double cleanse. Use an oil cleanser first for heavy waterproof sunscreens or long-wear makeup — this foam does not remove heavy-duty products alone.
Is it sulfate-free?
Yes — the cleanser uses only amino acid surfactants (sodium cocoyl glycinate and sodium lauroyl glutamate) and lacks SLS, SLES, or similar harsh sulfates. This makes it compatible with sensitive skin.
Can I use it in the morning and at night?
Yes, use it twice daily as intended. Some users with very dry skin prefer water-only in the morning and use the cleanser only at night — both approaches work.
Is it safe for sensitive skin?
Yes, it is. This formula is fragrance-free, alcohol-free, sulfate-free, and essential-oil-free. It uses panthenol and allantoin to soothe skin. This is a safe starter cleanser for those beginning K-beauty routines.
Does it actually hydrate the skin?
It avoids stripping the skin and deposits glycerin and substantive HA fractions during the wash. This leaves skin feeling hydrated and cushioned after rinse, not tight and squeaky. It is not a substitute for a moisturizer.
How does it compare to CeraVe Hydrating Cleanser?
We do not compare products in our reviews. Both act as gentle hydrating cleansers with different textures: CeraVe uses a lotion format with ceramides, and Torriden uses a whipped foam with layered hyaluronic acid. Both have high ratings in their category.
Does it lather well in hard water?
Yes. The amino acid surfactant blend reacts less to water hardness than sulfate-based cleansers, but foam volume may drop in very hard water.
What the community says.
"No post-wash tightness or squeak"
"Removes sunscreen without needing harsh surfactants"
"Gentle enough for daily sensitive-skin use"
"Whipped foam lather feels luxurious for the price"
"Pump bottle can feel a bit wasteful"
"Doesn't produce dramatic foam volume"
"Not strong enough for heavy waterproof makeup alone"
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