Korean Double Cleansing — Why It Is the Foundation of Glass Skin

Glass Skin · K-Skincare
Korean Skincare Fundamentals · Step 1

Korean Double Cleansing —
Why It Is the Foundation
of Glass Skin

The two-step cleanse that changes everything — and my $10 grocery store secret

After 25 years in the beauty industry, I have tried every cleansing method, product, and trend. I keep coming back to the same conclusion: nothing — absolutely nothing — works as well as the Korean double cleanse done properly. And the best first-step cleanser I have ever found does not come from a beauty store. It comes from the grocery aisle.

Glass Skin Double Cleansing Coconut Oil All Skin Types By Judy Kim
The Foundation

Why One Cleanser Is Never Enough

Here is something most people do not realize: your skin accumulates two completely different categories of impurities throughout the day, and they require two completely different approaches to remove.

Oil-based impurities — sunscreen, makeup, sebum, pollution particles bonded to oils — cannot be fully removed by water-based cleansers alone. The chemistry is simple: like dissolves like. Oil-based products require an oil-based solvent to break down and lift from skin. Water-based impurities — sweat, environmental pollution, dead skin cells, leftover skincare products — require a water-based cleanser to dissolve and rinse away.

Single cleansing with a foam or gel cleanser alone leaves a residue of oil-soluble impurities on your skin. Every serum, toner, and moisturizer you apply afterward sits on top of that residue instead of absorbing into clean skin. This is why people spend money on expensive serums and wonder why they are not working. The canvas is not clean.

“In 25 years in beauty, the single most impactful change I have seen people make to their skin is switching to double cleansing. It is not glamorous. It is not expensive. But it changes everything.” — Judy Kim
2x
More effective at removing sunscreen than single cleansing
30%
Better absorption of serums and actives after double cleansing
4 wks
Average time to see visible pore and texture improvement
The Science Behind Double Cleansing

Modern SPF and long-wearing makeup are specifically formulated to resist water and sweat — that is literally their purpose. When you try to remove them with a water-based foam cleanser, you are working against the product’s design. You may remove some of it, but a meaningful residue always remains. Studies using UV light and microscopy consistently show that single cleansing leaves visible SPF residue on skin even after thorough washing.

The oil-cleanse step works on the principle of solubility: oils in the cleanser bind to and surround oil-soluble impurities, emulsifying them so they rinse away cleanly with water. The second water-based cleanse then removes the emulsified residue plus sweat, environmental grime, and any remaining water-soluble debris — leaving skin genuinely clean without stripping its natural moisture barrier.

The Method

The Two Steps — What Each One Does

1
Oil Cleanse
Oil, balm, or micellar oil
Dissolves SPF, makeup, sebum, and oil-bonded pollution. Applied to dry skin. Massaged in, then emulsified with water and rinsed.
2
Water Cleanse
Foam, gel, or cream cleanser
Removes sweat, environmental debris, and oil cleanser residue. Applied to damp skin. Creates lather, then rinsed thoroughly.

The order is non-negotiable: oil first, water second. Reversing the order defeats the purpose entirely — a water cleanser cannot lift oil-soluble impurities, and using it first creates a barrier that prevents the oil cleanser from contacting the skin properly.

The entire process takes 90 seconds to 3 minutes once you have the rhythm. It is not a lengthy spa ritual — it is a quick, efficient system that Korean women have been using as a non-negotiable daily habit for generations.

* Judy’s Insider Secret

My Grocery Store First Cleanser
100% Pure Coconut Oil

I want to share something I tell everyone who asks me for my skincare advice. You do not need an expensive oil cleanser from a beauty store. For the past several years, I have been using 100% pure coconut oil from the grocery store as my first-step oil cleanser — and it works better than most dedicated cleansing oils I have tried in 25 years of beauty industry experience.

A jar of pure coconut oil at H-Mart, Costco, or any grocery store costs $8–$15 and lasts months. Compare that to a dedicated cleansing oil at $30–$60. The difference in performance? In my experience, minimal. The difference in what you are putting on your face? Significant.

Why Coconut Oil Works
  • 100% natural — no synthetic emulsifiers, fragrance, or preservatives
  • Rich in lauric acid (C12) — dissolves makeup and SPF on contact
  • Naturally antibacterial — lauric acid inhibits acne-causing bacteria
  • Removes even waterproof mascara and long-wear foundation
  • Leaves no residue after the second cleanse step
  • Costs a fraction of commercial cleansing oils
  • Shelf-stable for 2+ years — no expiry concerns
  • Available at every grocery store including Korean markets
Who Should Be Careful
  • Acne-prone skin: coconut oil is comedogenic (pore-clogging) for some people — patch test first on jaw area
  • If breakouts occur after 2 weeks, switch to a lighter oil (jojoba or squalane)
  • Must be followed by a proper second cleanse — do not use alone
  • Choose unrefined virgin coconut oil, not processed or refined versions
How I Use Grocery Store Coconut Oil as a First Cleanser
1
Start with completely dry hands and dry face
Water will prevent the oil from bonding to makeup and SPF. Do not splash your face first. The oil cleanse must happen on completely dry skin to work properly.
2
Scoop a small amount — about the size of a grape
Coconut oil is solid at room temperature below 76 degrees F — it will melt instantly on contact with your skin. Warm it between your fingers for 3–5 seconds until it becomes a clear liquid. You need very little — less than you think.
3
Massage gently for 60 seconds
Apply to face in gentle circular motions. Include eyelids for eye makeup removal — coconut oil is perfectly safe around eyes and removes mascara beautifully without tugging. Focus extra time on areas with heavy sunscreen or foundation. You will feel the makeup dissolving into the oil.
4
Emulsify with a small amount of water
Add a splash of lukewarm water to your face while the oil is still on. The oil will turn milky white — this is emulsification happening. Massage for another 20–30 seconds. The milky emulsion lifts the dissolved impurities away from skin.
5
Rinse thoroughly, then immediately do Step 2
Rinse the emulsified oil away with lukewarm water. Your skin may still feel slightly oily — this is normal and correct. Proceed immediately to your water-based cleanser (Step 2) while skin is damp.
Which Coconut Oil to Buy

Look for 100% Virgin Unrefined Coconut Oil — the label should say “cold-pressed” or “virgin.” Avoid refined, bleached, or deodorized coconut oil (often labeled just “coconut oil” without “virgin”). At Korean grocery stores like H-Mart, look in the health food or cooking oil aisle. Brands like Nutiva, Garden of Life, or any store-brand virgin coconut oil all work perfectly. Price: $8–$15 for a 14–16 oz jar at Costco or grocery stores.

Product Guide

First Cleanser Options — From $10 to $40

If coconut oil does not work for your skin type, here are the best alternatives across all budgets. I have personally used or evaluated all of these during my 25 years in the industry.

Budget Pick
Virgin Coconut Oil
100% natural, grocery store accessible, excellent for dry and normal skin. Best for makeup and light SPF.
$8–$15
For Acne-Prone
Jojoba Oil
Non-comedogenic (does not clog pores). Closest oil to skin’s natural sebum. Excellent for oily and breakout-prone skin.
$12–$20
K-Beauty Pick
Banila Co Clean It Zero
Korea’s best-selling cleansing balm. Melts on contact, removes all makeup and SPF. Excellent for all skin types.
$22–$28
Sensitive Skin
Squalane Oil
Ultra-lightweight, non-comedogenic, suitable for every skin type including rosacea and eczema. Odorless.
$14–$22
Premium Pick
Sulwhasoo Gentle Cleansing Oil
Korean luxury cleansing oil with ginseng and herbal extracts. The gold standard for mature and dry skin.
$42–$55
Travel-Friendly
DHC Deep Cleansing Oil
Japanese cleansing oil, beloved in Korea. Olive oil base, travel-size available, excellent for all skin types.
$18–$28
Second Cleanser by Skin Type
Skin Type Best Second Cleanser Type Korean Recommendation
Oily / Acne-Prone Low-pH gel or foam cleanser COSRX Low pH Good Morning Gel Cleanser
Dry / Mature Cream or milk cleanser Klairs Rich Moist Foaming Cleanser
Sensitive / Reactive Fragrance-free gentle foam CeraVe Hydrating Cleanser or Purito Centella Cleanser
Combination Mild low-pH foam Some By Mi AHA BHA PHA 30 Days Miracle Toner (after cleansing)
Normal Any gentle foam or gel Innisfree Green Tea Foam Cleanser
The Complete Method

The Full Evening Double Cleanse Routine

Double cleansing is an evening ritual. In the morning, a single gentle rinse or light cleanser is sufficient — your skin has been resting on a clean pillow and does not need the full oil-cleanse step. Here is the complete evening process.

✨ What's Your Skin Type?

Get your free personalized K-beauty routine in 2 minutes.

Take the Free AI Quiz →

1
Dry hands, dry face — apply oil cleanser
Scoop virgin coconut oil (or your preferred cleansing oil) onto dry fingertips. Apply to completely dry face in gentle circular motions for 60 seconds. Include eye area.
Time: 60 seconds  |  Key: completely dry skin before starting
2
Emulsify with water
Add a small amount of lukewarm water. Massage until the oil turns milky. This emulsification lifts dissolved impurities off the skin surface.
Time: 20–30 seconds  |  Look for: milky white color
3
Rinse the oil cleanser
Rinse with lukewarm water. Skin will feel slightly oily — this is correct. Do not over-rinse trying to remove all oil feeling.
Time: 20 seconds  |  Water: lukewarm, never hot
4
Apply water-based cleanser to damp face
With face still damp, apply your foam or gel cleanser. Work into a lather on your hands first, then apply to face in gentle upward circular motions. Do not scrub.
Time: 30–45 seconds  |  Key: gentle, no tugging
5
Rinse thoroughly with cool water
Rinse the foam cleanser away completely. Finish with cool (not cold) water to close pores. Pat dry gently with a clean soft towel — do not rub.
Time: 20–30 seconds  |  End: cool water rinse
6
Apply toner immediately on damp skin
Do not wait — apply your Korean toner or essence while skin is still slightly damp. This 3-minute window after cleansing is when skin absorption is at its highest.
Time: within 3 minutes of cleansing  |  Key: do not let skin dry out
What to Avoid

5 Double Cleansing Mistakes That Ruin Results

1
Starting with wet skin
The oil cleanser must contact completely dry skin to dissolve SPF and makeup effectively. Water creates a barrier between the oil and oil-soluble impurities, dramatically reducing cleansing efficacy. Always start the oil cleanse on a completely dry face.
2
Skipping the second cleanse
Oil cleansing alone leaves an oily residue on skin that can clog pores overnight. The second water-based cleanse is not optional — it completes the system. Using only the oil step is worse than a proper single cleanse.
3
Using hot water
Hot water strips the skin’s natural lipid barrier, causing rebound dryness and sensitivity. Korean women use lukewarm water for cleansing and finish with cool water. Never hot — ever. This is one of the most common causes of tight, dry skin after cleansing.
4
Rubbing the face dry
Rubbing a towel across freshly cleansed skin creates micro-friction that irritates skin and stretches delicate areas around the eyes and mouth over time. Pat gently with a soft, clean towel. Better yet, use a separate dedicated face towel changed every 2–3 days.
5
Waiting too long to apply toner
Freshly cleansed skin has an open, receptive surface that starts to form a defensive barrier within minutes. The 2–3 minute window after cleansing is when active ingredients absorb most effectively. Waiting 10 minutes while you check your phone means your toner and serum absorb far less efficiently.
Coconut Oil Patch Test Important

Acne-prone skin: Coconut oil has a comedogenicity rating of 4 out of 5 — meaning it has a higher-than-average tendency to clog pores for some people. Always patch test on your jawline for 1 week before using on the full face. If breakouts increase, switch to jojoba oil (rating: 2) or squalane (rating: 0). Sensitive skin: Use unscented, unrefined virgin coconut oil only. Refined coconut oil may contain processing residues that can irritate. Nut allergy: Coconut is technically a tree nut. If you have tree nut allergies, consult your doctor before applying coconut oil to skin.

Judy’s Personal Note
“I discovered the grocery store coconut oil trick completely by accident. I ran out of my cleansing oil and grabbed the coconut oil from my kitchen. My skin felt incredible the next morning — cleaner, softer, and more balanced than usual. I have been using it ever since. As someone who has spent 25 years evaluating beauty products professionally, it still surprises me that a $12 jar from the grocery store outperforms most $40 cleansing oils. The lesson is one I keep learning: sometimes the simplest, most natural approach really is the best one.”
— Judy Kim  ·  K-Beauty Food Blog  ·  Long Island, NY
Read Next in Glass Skin Series
The 7 Best Korean Toners
for Glass Skin in 2026
Read Next →

Similar Posts