“What 12-year-old needs to start retinol treatment?”
That’s the question one research participant asked – and it captures the tension at the heart of skincare today. Younger consumers are more educated, more ingredient-literate, and more engaged than any generation before them. They’re also more vulnerable, more skeptical, and learning in entirely new ways.
And brands? They’re caught between an opportunity and an ethical minefield.
What we found
Our latest research reveals stark generational divides in how consumers discover, evaluate, and purchase skincare – and what it means for brands navigating an increasingly complex landscape:
Then vs. now isn’t just about routine complexity. Older generations grew up with one-brand loyalty and minimal routines. Today’s teens are layering serums, researching percentages, and building knowledge younger than ever. But education doesn’t mean maximalism – younger consumers actively reject 10-step routines in favor of efficacy with minimal steps.
Discovery and vetting look nothing alike across age groups. Gen Alpha, Gen Z, and younger Millennials learn on TikTok and validate on Reddit. Older Millennials, Gen X, and Baby Boomers blend in-store sampling with online ingredient checks. Both are more sophisticated than ever – just in different ways.
There’s a darker side to hyper-engagement. As young as 7, kids are accessing potent actives like retinol without understanding concentration differences, layering protocols, or complementary barrier care. The UK recently restricted OTC retinol strength in response. The ethical question for brands: where does your responsibility to educate – not just sell – begin?
Trust is fragile, and the rules for earning it have shifted. Younger consumers distrust paid content and celebrity cash-grabs. Older consumers favor expert sources and clinical backing. Both expect ingredient transparency and education – not just brand marketing.
Why this matters now
You’re no longer selling to a monolithic “skincare consumer”. You’re selling to the most educated, most skeptical, and most segmented audience skincare has ever seen – and they expect your brand to reflect that sophistication in how you communicate, recommend, and position products.
Whether you’re trying to reach a Gen Z ingredient scanner or a Gen X loyalist evolving their routine, understanding how each generation learns, trusts, and buys is no longer optional.
Download the full report
Our whitepaper, “The skincare generation gap: why younger consumers know more but buy differently”, maps the discovery, education, trust, and purchasing behaviors shaping skincare across generations – and delivers four actionable takeaways to help your brand respond strategically.
Inside, you’ll find:
- How discovery and vetting differ by generation (and why TikTok rivals dermatologists)
- The education paradox: why younger consumers reject complexity despite deep product knowledge
- How purchasing logic has shifted from brand loyalty to ingredient-driven experimentation
- Five strategic imperatives for brands to reach today’s fragmented, informed skincare consumer
- The ethical question brands must answer as young consumers gain access to potent actives without adequate education
Click here to download the full report or if you would like to hear more in person, contact Alix or Kat.
Alix Greenman / Kat Bailey, Feb 2026