Lip Care Sales are Up in Q4. Will This Trend Continue in 2026?
What this might mean for how we think about beauty spending.
Sugar scrubs and lip serums are popular with consumers this year.
According to industry data, something interesting is happening in the beauty aisle at stores throughout the United States.
Brands once focused on the trendiest lipstick colors have started obsessing over lip treatments. Lip balms and sugar scrubs that once lived on medicine cabinet shelves as extraneous niceties have now become a must-have skincare category with potent serums, masks, and treatments leading the charge according to Inc.com
What’s driving it? According to writer Ali Donaldson consumers are becoming more routine-obsessed about the delicate skin on the lips. Instead of just gloss or pigment, brands are creating campaigns around lip specific wellness-forward formulas with ingredients like peptides, vitamin E, vitamin C, and shea butter.
And founders are listening. Established names and indie brands alike are launching lip lines that blur the line between skincare and makeup. Some talk explicitly about “natural alternatives to fillers and injectables”, positioning these formulations as ways to boost hydration and support healthy skin rather than simulate volume the way cosmetic procedures do.
From Ayesha Curry’s expansion of Sweet July into lip treatments to Bubble Skincare and Glowbar’s new launches, the message is clear: everyone wants nourished, supple lips.
All this is happening against a backdrop of overall beauty spending that’s not just about “pretty” anymore — people are voting with their wallets for products that feel more like self-care than traditional cosmetics.
FAQ
Why is lip care trending in the beauty industry?
Lip care is trending because consumers are prioritizing skin health, hydration, and wellness-focused beauty products. Lips are now viewed as delicate skin requiring targeted care, not just cosmetic color.
How is lip care different from traditional lip makeup?
Modern lip care products focus on treatment rather than pigment. They often include skincare ingredients like peptides, antioxidants, and nourishing oils designed to improve lip texture and hydration over time.
Are lip care products replacing cosmetic procedures?
While lip care products don’t replace cosmetic procedures, many are marketed as natural alternatives to fillers, offering hydration and skin support without injections.
What does this trend mean for beauty brands?
Brands that position lip products as part of a skincare or self-care routine — rather than just makeup — are better aligned with current consumer values and spending habits.

