Levero Coloring Shampoo — Grey Coverage, Light Brown (300ml)
Grey coverage, worked in like a shampoo — Light Brown.
Levero is a coloring shampoo made for grey at the roots and temples. Lather through wet hair, leave it on, then rinse — a soft, natural light-brown tone builds with regular use, while a brewer's-yeast and botanical base keeps the wash gentle. Quietly, over a normal routine, rather than in one harsh session.
- Wash-in grey coverage in a soft light brown
- Brewer's yeast + conditioning base
- Skin low-irritation tested (per the brand's Intertek report)
- All scalp & hair types · 300ml · made in Korea
How to use: Apply to wet hair like shampoo, focus on the greyest areas, leave on, then rinse with lukewarm water. Use 2–3 times in a row for first color, then periodically to maintain.
Read before you buy: This is a grey-coverage color product. The complete, risk-rated ingredient list is on this page — always patch test 48 hours before first use.
Ships from Korea, worldwide.
The lighter shade skips the harshest dye intermediates — a notch gentler, still an oxidative dye.
Before we selected this, we screened the category's best sellers on the same EWG-style scale we use on ourselves. Tap any row to read its full graded ingredient list.
Amazon best sellers
Olive Young best sellers · K-beauty's mecca
So — our pick
Risk distribution 55 graded
Free of screened
Hero ingredient — Brewer's yeast.
What that benchmark led us to decide
Lighter shades don't need the harshest dye intermediates, so this clears our scale a notch higher at 7.5. No oxidative dye is 'clean,' but for fast at-home gray coverage that's ammonia-free and brewer's-yeast-conditioned — and free of PPD and phenacetin — this is one of the more livable versions, with every flagged ingredient listed so you can decide with eyes open.
Grey, covered in the wash.
Levero is a coloring shampoo for grey at the roots and temples. Lather through wet hair, leave it on, then rinse — the light brown tone builds with regular use while a brewer's-yeast and botanical base keeps the wash gentle. A quiet, repeatable routine instead of a salon afternoon.

Grey shows first at the roots
Grey usually arrives at the temples and parting before anywhere else — the spots that read first in the mirror. Box dye and salon visits mean gloves, mixing, timing and a free afternoon.
Color, the easy way
A two-agent oxidative color — a color base plus a developer that sets the tone into the strand — applied like a shampoo, so the whole thing happens in the shower.
Colors as you lather
Worked through wet hair like shampoo, it deposits the light brown tone evenly — with extra payoff where grey shows most, around the hairline and parting.
Brewer's yeast + botanicals
A conditioning base with brewer's yeast, Centella and panthenol-style agents helps keep the cuticle smooth and hair soft through the color process.
Low effort
No bowl, no sectioning. Lather, wait, rinse. If it gets on skin or surfaces, rinse promptly with soap and water.

Touch-ups, not whole afternoons
Three steps
Wet & apply
Wet hair, pump an even amount into your hands, and work it through like a regular shampoo — focus on the roots and greyest areas.
Leave on
Leave it on so the color can develop, then check your tone. For first-time color, use 2–3 washes in a row, then periodically to maintain.
Rinse
Rinse thoroughly with lukewarm water until the water runs clear. No separate conditioner needed.
Tip: rinse on time. If the lather sits too long it can leave residue on hands or around the sink — rinse promptly and there's no mess.
Light Brown, on the shelf






An honest note on the formula
Levero is an oxidative hair color — that's what makes the tone even and long-lasting. Depending on shade, the formula contains oxidative dyes such as PPD, toluene-2,5-diamine and resorcinol — common hair-dye allergens — and the developer contains hydrogen peroxide. We don't hide that behind the label.
Always do a 48-hour patch test before your first use, and skip it if you've ever reacted to a hair dye. The complete, risk-rated ingredient list — every ingredient in both agents — is published right below this story.
Questions, answered
How do I use it?
Wet your hair, pump an appropriate amount into your hands, and apply evenly like shampoo. Leave it on to develop, then rinse with lukewarm water. For first color, use it 2–3 washes in a row, then periodically to keep the tone fresh.
How often should I use it?
Daily use is fine. When you need more coverage, use it 2–3 times in a row, then maintain on a regular cycle — that tends to be the most effective rhythm.
Is it safe for a sensitive scalp?
It's ammonia- and paraben-free and skin low-irritation tested (per the brand's report), but it is still an oxidative dye and sensitivities vary. Always do a 48-hour patch test first, and don't use it if you've previously reacted to hair dye.
Will it stain my hands or sink?
It's formulated to be low-mess. Keratin-rich nails or skin can pick up a little color, so rinse promptly; spills on tiles or the tub should be rinsed straight away rather than left to sit.
Can I use it on my beard?
Yes — it works on facial hair the same way. Keep it well clear of the eyes and rinse thoroughly.
Where does it ship from?
Made in Korea and ships worldwide. The full risk-rated ingredient list for both agents is on this page so you can read everything before you buy.
Read every ingredient first.
We list both agents in full and risk-rate each one — the high-risk dyes included — so nothing's hidden.
See the full ingredient list