Prestige +6%Mass +7%
Industry TrendsAll4 min read9 May 2026

For the First Time in Five Years, Mass Beauty Is Growing as Fast as Prestige. Here Is What That Changes.

Circana's Q1 2026 data shows prestige beauty growing at 6% and mass beauty growing at 7%. The gap that drove five years of premium positioning strategy has effectively closed.

SL
Sophie Lansbury

Beauty 2.0 Founder - 20 years in the beauty industry

Premium positioning alone is not a growth strategy. The brands growing above the category average in 2026 are winning on formulation credibility, retention mechanics, or channel advantage - not price point alone.

Key takeaway

In brief
What the Circana Q1 2026 data actually means for brands sitting at premium price points, and where the growth opportunity lives when mass and prestige are moving in lockstep.
Who this is for
All
Main takeaway
Premium positioning alone is not a growth strategy. The brands growing above the category average in 2026 are winning on formulation credibility, retention mechanics, or channel advantage - not price point alone.
What to do next
Look at your repeat purchase data. If your customer retention rate is below 35% at 12 months, your premium price point is not earning loyalty. That is where to focus.

Circana published US beauty market data for Q1 2026 this week. The headline figure is solid: prestige retail sales up 6%, mass up 7%. The US beauty market continues to grow.

The number that matters for strategy is not the growth rate. It is the gap between the two.

For most of the last five years, prestige beauty reliably outgrew mass beauty. The margin varied by year and category, but the direction was consistent. Premium products commanded premium growth. The industry treated this as a law of gravity: move upmarket, grow faster.

That law no longer applies. And the strategies built on it need revisiting.

What drove the prestige premium in the first place

Between 2019 and 2024, several forces pushed prestige beauty ahead of the mass market.

The first was the skincare education wave. As consumers learned more about actives, clinical ingredients, and formulation science, they became willing to pay more for products they could understand and justify. The informed consumer graduated from mass brands into prestige.

The second was premiumisation in retail. Sephora, Space NK, Cult Beauty, and similar retailers expanded aggressively, making premium products more accessible. Distribution drove trial, trial drove repeat, repeat drove growth.

The third was the pandemic effect. Consumers at home spent on self-care. Prestige skincare was the primary beneficiary. The growth was partially demographic and partially spend-per-buyer as existing consumers traded up.

All three of those tailwinds are now either stalled or reversed.

What changed

The informed consumer who graduated from mass to prestige has now been an informed consumer for several years. They are not a prestige buyer because they feel aspirational. They are a prestige buyer because they want specific outcomes. And increasingly, mass brands are delivering those outcomes.

e.l.f. Beauty reporting 25% growth on the same day Circana showed mass and prestige growing at the same rate is not coincidence. Mass brands have closed the formulation quality gap significantly. CeraVe, The Ordinary, Naturium, and e.l.f. are selling ceramide-rich, peptide-forward, clinically-positioned products at £10 to £20. The question of why the same outcomes cost £60 from a prestige brand is being asked more loudly than it used to be.

The dupe economy accelerated this shift. When millions of TikTok users spend their evenings comparing formulation lists and INCI percentages, the quality perception gap between mass and prestige shrinks. The prestige premium that relied on mystique, aspiration, and brand heritage has been partially commoditised.

What the opportunity actually looks like now

The brands growing above the market average in 2026 are not the ones with the best positioning. They are the ones with the best retention.

When mass and prestige grow at the same rate, acquisition becomes less of a differentiator. The market is not growing fast enough for brand acquisition alone to cover the cost of poor retention. The brands compounding are the ones keeping customers - through formulation that genuinely delivers, through email and community that builds attachment, through a product architecture that earns repeat purchase.

There are also categories inside the overall market growing significantly faster than the 6 to 7% average. Fragrance is one. Treatment-led hair care is another. Body care is a third. The overall convergence of mass and prestige masks meaningful divergence by category. The strategic move is to identify which categories still have a genuine premium story and where the formulation gap between mass and prestige remains wide enough to justify the price difference.

For indie and growth-stage brands

If you are priced between £25 and £65 and your primary positioning argument is that you are better than a mass alternative, the Q1 2026 data is a warning.

Being premium-priced is fine. But the justification for that price needs to be specific: a clinical result the mass equivalent cannot deliver, a formulation standard the mass brand cannot match, a sensory experience genuinely distinct, or a service layer (personalisation, education, consultation) that mass retail cannot replicate.

Generic premium positioning - good packaging, aspirational lifestyle imagery, slightly better ingredients - is no longer a growth strategy. The market just told you that.

The brands that will outgrow the category from here will be the ones that earn their premium rather than assert it.

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SL

Sophie Lansbury

Founder of Beauty 2.0. Nearly 20 years in beauty — from counter to boardroom, indie launches to global houses. Writes about the operational reality of growing beauty brands.

About Sophie

For five years, growing faster than mass was the proof point for premium positioning. That proof point just disappeared. The strategy question now is what replaces it.

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