Meghan Markle is among Tatcha's many famous fans. Getty Images for TIME; Tatcha From Hollywood royalty to real-life royals, plenty of stars rinse and repeat with products from Tatcha.
The Japanese beauty brand’s luxe formulas also get rave reviews from shoppers — so when we see an opportunity to save on them, we jump.
Enter the new value-sized — or as Tatcha calls it, “gratitude-sized” — version of its bestselling Rice Wash cleanser. Given it comes with twice the amount of product for just $19 more than the standard size, there’s plenty to be grateful for.
While the gentle yet effective cream cleanser is valued at $80, it rings in at just under $60.
The formula is packed with ingredients like Japanese rice powder to smooth and soften, plus hyaluronic acid and okinawa algae blendiven to plump and hydrate skin. (It foams into a rich, creamy lather, making the experience of applying it is just as luxe as the spa-like packaging.)
Though she didn’t name a specific formula, Selena Gomez shouted out the brand’s cleansers in a 2022 British Vogue interview, saying: “I love Tatcha – I think a lot of their moisturizers and face washes are gentle, but also extract all the nasty stuff.”
Meghan Markle is also a longtime fan of the brand, having praised The Rice Polish — the exfoliating counterpart to The Rice Wash — as far back as 2017
“It just sort of foams on your face and gives you a really subtle exfoliation,” she told Allure, a couple of years before giving every guest at her baby shower a bottle of the stuff.
Her go-to makeup artist, Daniel Martin, is so obsessed, he even became an ambassador for the brand, telling Page Six Style the key to natural-looking skin on the red carpet is “balance — hydration without heaviness.”
Gomez and the Duchess of Sussex are far from Tatcha only famous fans; Martha Stewart told us she uses its Camellia Cleansing Oil, while everyone from Jennifer Aniston to Kathy Hilton has name-dropped the brand’s skincare in interviews over the years.
This article was written by Hannah Southwick, Commerce Associate Editor for Page Six. Hannah spies deals on actually affordable celebrity-worn styles, puts celebrities’ brands to the test and finds the beauty products that keep stars red carpet-ready. She consults stylists and industry pros — including celebs themselves — for firsthand product recommendations, trend predictions and more. In addition to writing for Page Six since 2020, her work has been featured in USA Today and Parade.