You read the reviews online. One person says a product completely changed their hair. Someone else says it’s the worst thing they’ve ever tried. And you’re left with no idea whether it will actually work for your hair.
That disconnect is not a coincidence — and it’s not your fault. It’s a combination of misleading marketing, mismatched expectations, and the simple fact that products work very differently depending on your hair type, your needs, and what you’re pairing them with.
As a Curl Coach, I help people understand what to look for in products so they shop smarter and buy less. In this post, I’m breaking down five of the most controversial curl products on the market.
Bond-Building Treatment Comparison: Olaplex No. 3 Plus vs. K-18
These are two of the most talked-about bond-building treatments at a similar price point, and I tested them side by side on the same wash day — one on each side of my head.
Neither of these can be fully evaluated in one use for damage repair, and my hair is not severely damaged, so I am not evaluating them on that. What I can evaluate is the application, ease of use, how each fits into a routine, and how they interact with your other products — which is ultimately what will help you decide.
They also target two different layers of hair damage. They are not the same product in different packaging, and that distinction is how you make the right choice.
K-18 Leave-In Molecular Repair Hair Mask
Brand Claims
- Leave-in treatment applied post-shampoo
- Uses a patented synthetic peptide (K18Peptide) to reconnect broken polypeptide chains — a different layer of repair than the disulfide bonds Olaplex targets
- Apply after shampooing, leave four minutes, skip conditioner
- Clinically proven claim is tied to a bleaching service context, not general home use — results may vary by hair type and damage history
Mixed Reviews
Two camps emerge:
- Follow directions strictly, skip conditioner → hair feels dry and stripped
- Leave it in as directed → hair feels overconditioned or hold is softened
Both complaints make sense once you know something the label does not state clearly: the repair is permanent within four minutes. You can rinse it out, condition, or even shampoo after — the repair work is not undone. Most people don’t know this, which is why they follow directions strictly and end up unhappy.
Application
- Applied to one side on clean, damp hair in sections, brushed through for even coverage
- Felt creamy, softening, and conditioning — easy to detangle with
- Rinsed out thoroughly after four minutes — did not want conditioning residue under my gel, which can soften your cast
Wash Day Results
- These products are about long-term strength and maintenance — one wash is not going to show you that
- Filmed both sides product-free, air-dried, to show the actual structural effect
- Neither side felt weighed down after shampooing
- K-18 side appeared slightly more damp than the Olaplex side — not making a claim about what that means, hair dries at different rates
Olaplex No. 3 Plus
Brand Claims
- Bond-building pre-shampoo treatment
- Repairs disulfide bonds — the sulfur-to-sulfur bonds broken by bleach, color, chemical services, and heat
- New Plus formula also repairs ionic and hydrogen bonds
- Added shea butter and oils for conditioning
- Apply to wet hair before shampooing, wait three minutes, shampoo out
- Does not replace your conditioner — you still need to condition after
- Common mistake: applying to dry hair — it does nothing; hair must be wet for the product to penetrate
Why It Was Reformulated — and Why It Matters
The original formula drew complaints that it didn’t make hair feel soft. People expected a conditioning effect, which is not what it’s designed to do — it’s repairing hair strength at the structural level, which you cannot feel on the surface.
So Olaplex added conditioning ingredients. Now some people say the new version weighs their hair down.
My take: if you’re shampooing thoroughly after, you should be fully removing those conditioning properties. If you’re still experiencing heaviness, check your shampoo first — many shampoos, including some from the Olaplex line, still contain conditioning ingredients that could be the real culprit. Use a strong, clear shampoo with no conditioning agents if heaviness is a problem.
Mixed Reviews
- Primary complaint: heaviness after shampooing out, especially for fine or wavy hair
- Complaint across both old and new formulas: expected a hair mask feel and didn’t get one
- The repair is happening internally — you cannot feel it on the surface, which makes it hard to know if it’s even working
Application
- Applied to the other side using the same techniques as K-18
- Felt very softening and conditioning — noticeably thicker than K-18 but similarly easy to work through
- Shampooed my whole head once after both products — did not want conditioning residue from either product interfering with my gel’s hold
Wash Day Results
- If you’re experiencing heaviness with either of these, shampooing after is the first thing to address
- Same as K-18 side — clean, air-dried, no styling products
- Neither one weighed my hair down — but I shampooed after both, which is likely why

Which One Should You Buy?
K-18
- Applied post-shampoo as a leave-in
- Does not require a shampoo step after
- Leaving it in can over-condition your hair and soften your hold; rinsing it out will leave your hair feeling dry without conditioner. Ends up being just as many steps as Olaplex
- Significantly more expensive
Olaplex No. 3 Plus
- Applied before shampoo
- Less likely to interfere with your hold or how your hair feels going into styling
- Conditioning addition in the new formula is useful, but since it’s a pre-shampoo treatment, much of that conditioning benefit gets washed away
- More affordable
Neither product will feel like a deep conditioning treatment after shampooing out. Both get the same complaint — people expected a conditioning feel and didn’t get one. That is a mismatched expectation, not a product failure. Condition your hair after using either one, regardless of what the label says. It solves both the dryness and the hold interference issue.
If neither appeals to you, a regular deep conditioning mask used post-shampoo serves a different but valid maintenance purpose — just know it is not doing the same structural repair work.
COLOR WOW Dream Coat for Curly Hair
I went into this one completely blind. I have always been skeptical of the one-and-done claim and had never tested it until now.
Brand Claims
- One-step replacement for gels, creams, and serums
- Frizz-free, bouncy, glossy curls with flexible hold lasting up to three days
- Crunch-free, no cast
- Targets fine and medium hair textures specifically

Mixed Reviews
Two camps emerge:
- No hold, limp results, hair too soft — even people who saturate thoroughly report no longevity
- Genuinely like the shine and softness it delivers
Important context: the original Dream Coat is heat-activated and designed for straight and smooth styles. This version requires no heat activation and targets a completely different hair population. The brand extended the name but not the technology — and many people come in expecting the same result.
Application
- Water-based spray — nearly impossible to apply evenly to hair
- Had to spray into my hand; it ran straight off
- No way to know if coverage was even
- Used roughly half the bottle
- Hair had very little slip during styling — felt like water, not a cream or gel
- Followed my usual routine anyway: brush styling, finger coiling, scrunching, microplop, extra coat, diffused
Wash Day Results
- Hair had a strong cast after diffusing — unexpected from a product claiming crunch-free
- Strand test for longevity: ran fingers down a curl and the entire clump busted apart immediately — frizzy, undefined, could not get it back. No real hold despite the cast.
- After breaking the full cast:
- Noticeably frizzier than with gel
- Flat and weighed down, not much volume
- Curl clumps fairly intact but hair felt like there was almost nothing in it
- Very high shine — that part delivered
- Slightly stringier than normal
- A few hours later things started breaking down significantly

Day Two
- Significant elongation — something I personally never experience
- A lot of frizz, zero definition
- Did not hold up in humidity at all
- Hair felt overly soft and silky from the polymers and silicones
- Could not keep hair ties in, bonnet kept sliding off
- Flat, no volume, no grip
Verdict: Skip
- Application is impractical for a product claiming to replace your entire styling routine
- Formed a cast with zero hold — strand test confirmed it, everything fell apart when broken
- Day two was the worst result of any product in this video
- Silicone content made hair too soft and slippery — coaching clients who removed this and switched to gel immediately got better results
- Would not use this as a heat protectant either — it will soften your gel cast
Why reviews are divided and what to do instead
- Fine and medium hair needing minimal support may find it sufficient — anyone needing structural hold will be disappointed
- The original Dream Coat’s reputation leads people to expect a transformation this version cannot deliver
- If you need hold, use a gel. If you want shine and frizz control without hold, there are better options that don’t cost half a bottle per use
Kitsch Smoothing Air Dry Cream
A bestseller on Amazon with over 1,100 reviews and a 3.8-star rating. A bestseller with that rating tells you a lot of people were disappointed.
What “Air Dry Cream” Actually Means
Air dry cream is a use-case label, not a formula category. It tells you when to use the product, not what it does. This is a cream — emollient base, softening ingredients, no structural hold mechanism. You can diffuse any cream. The name does not restrict you to air drying.
These products were originally created for people who heat style and want to wear their natural texture without blowing it out. The confusion comes when the marketing extends to curly hair, where expectations for definition, hold, and longevity are much higher.
Brand Claims
- 24-hour frizz control
- Wave and curl definition
- Lightweight hold

Mixed Reviews
- Low star reviews consistently mention no hold and no curl definition despite the bestseller status
- Some reviewers love how soft and smooth it makes their hair
- The most common complaint: expected it to enhance and define curls, got softness instead
Application
- Wax ingredient immediately noticeable — reduced slip significantly
- Felt resistance when raking through, almost like it was dragging
- Could not finger coil — not enough slip to wrap hair around my finger
- Praying hands felt sticky
- Product was drying too quickly while styling — had to keep adding water
- Hair was already starting to set in high porosity areas before diffusing
- Practical note: lid screws off completely — you have to keep track of it separately
Wash Day Results
- A lot of frizz, especially in higher porosity and coarser areas
- Hair sticking together with visible webbing — not clumping, sticking
- No cast to break
- Curl clumping only where my hair naturally clumps — the product contributed nothing
- Texturized feel but not in a good way
- Slightly flatter than usual, a little weighed down
- No hold whatsoever
- For comparison: the Innersense Air Dry Cream performs significantly better. This does not come close.
Day Two
- Frizz increased, no longevity — day two confirmed what wash day already showed

Verdict: Skip — for every hair type
- No hold, no clumping, no frizz control
- Wax creates unpleasant texture without any of the benefits you would expect
- Dried too fast to even finish styling properly
- Cannot identify a use case for curly or wavy hair
- Beginners reaching for this because of the marketing will have a disappointing first experience — and may blame their hair instead of the product
Why reviews are divided and what to do instead
- Marketing is doing the selling, not the formula
- Beginners think air dry cream means effortless waves with hold — it does not
- If you want to use a cream, pair it under a gel — a cream alone cannot control frizz or give you hold
- If you are new to curly hair styling, reach for a gel instead — same application, better results, longer lasting
OUAI Curl Cream
Popular with beginners, wavy hair, and loose curl types — and consistently misunderstood. The mixed reviews make complete sense once you understand what the formula is actually doing.
Brand Claims
- Defines curls
- Tames frizz
- Adds shine
- For all curl types
- Humidity protection via chia seed and linseed oils
- Fragrance-free — a genuine positive, and a rare one in this category

The “all curl types” claim is worth scrutinizing. The primary styling ingredients are coconut oil and shea butter — conditioning agents that soften and coat the hair. They do not form a hold structure. This is a conditioning styler, not a defining styler. The price reflects brand equity, not formula complexity. The top ingredients are available at drugstore prices.
Mixed Reviews
- Does not hold, does not define, does not keep frizz down regardless of how much product is used
- Fine or low-porosity hair reports greasy or dirty-looking results
- Common coaching pattern: beginners reach for this thinking a product called “curl cream” will give them curly, defined hair — curl creams can enhance curl pattern but they will not hold it
Application
- Used less than usual — could immediately tell it was concentrated and heavy
- Emulsified well with water, felt very soft and slippery
- Good slip — was able to finger coil easily
- Hair clumped reasonably well with usual techniques
- Extended dry time significantly — heavy curl creams do this, and this one was no exception
Wash Day Results
- Clumped and defined, but not defined like gel — wider, softer clumps
- Held clumps in some areas but problem areas frizzed up
- A lot of halo frizz and root frizz, especially around grays and higher porosity areas
- No cast — very soft feeling
- Hair almost felt still damp in some areas from locking in so much moisture
- Volume was okay but less than usual
- No shine, despite the brand emphasizing this
- No hold
Day Two
- Frizz increased overnight, no longevity
- Soft wide clumps from wash day lost their shape — no cast means nothing protecting the style

Verdict: Skip for most hair types — but there is a use case
- Fine, low-porosity, or barely wavy hair: skip entirely, use gel alone
- Coarse hair that needs heavy emollients: can work as a layer under a strong hold gel — not as a standalone styler
- If layering under gel, you will need a very strong hold gel to compensate for how much this softens your hold
- My hair can withstand conditioning products without getting weighed down — most hair types will not have the same experience
Why reviews are divided and what to do instead
- Coarse, high-porosity hair that needs heavy emollients may genuinely benefit — everyone else will get weighed down or lose hold
- “All curl types” is only true if you define curl definition very loosely — this product is being used by the wrong hair types at scale
- Pair it under a gel if you want definition and longevity — a curl cream alone cannot control frizz
- Fine or barely wavy hair: skip the cream and go straight to gel
- The ingredient profile exists at a fraction of the cost in drugstore options — price does not change what coconut oil can do
Why Curl Product Reviews Are So Divided
Every single product here has people who love it and people who got nothing from it. Both groups are telling the truth.
Results depend on your hair type, what you actually need from a product, and what you are pairing it with. A product is not good or bad — it is right or wrong for your specific hair. And none of that is explained before you buy.
That’s the disconnect that shows up in consumer reviews. Either people have different expectations than what the product delivers, the product didn’t live up to inflated claims, or people weren’t given the right guidance on how to use it because the label is confusing.
This is not your fault. It is genuinely hard to shop for curl products when the marketing is misleading and the reviews contradict each other.
Read my post on how to shop smarter to know what to look for.
Find the Right Products for Your Hair
If you want to browse product recommendations filtered by your hair type, hold level, and specific needs like heat or UV protection, visit my Shop Page — everything is organized and filterable so you can find what actually makes sense for your hair.
For more product comparisons, the product guides playlist on my YouTube channel covers everything from the best strong hold gels for rough versus soft finish hair, to a full curl cream comparison featuring options that actually provide hold.
And if you’re still finding yourself guessing — why something worked one week and not the next, what to adjust when the weather changes, which products are actually right for your hair type — that is exactly what I help people work through in my Curl Coaching Program. There, you will learn to understand your own hair, not just follow a routine. You learn to diagnose it, adjust it, and get consistent results.






