BeautyHealth Releases Third Annual Skintuition Report
Designed to decode the state of skin health today and where it’s headed, the report integrates science, innovation, clinical data, cultural trends, and provider perspectives to reveal why skin regeneration, rather than skin correction, is becoming the new beauty standard.
This year’s findings point to a meaningful reordering of aesthetic priorities. Consumers are entering a skin-first era, with industry research showing 75 percent of consumers are now prioritizing treatments that improve overall skin quality over volume-enhancing procedures.1 Additional findings point to an increasing demand for firmer, smoother, more hydrated skin, 2 reinforcing the move toward treatments that strengthen and renew the skin over time. To meet this demand, Hydrafacial introduced the HydraFillic with Pep9™ Booster in
“For 28 years, Hydrafacial has partnered with providers to help innovate and meet the evolving needs of aesthetic consumers,” said Hydrafacial Chief Marketing Officer
Key Trends Shaping 2026 and Beyond
Skintuition Report: Volume Three identifies five major trends reshaping how consumers and providers think about skin health:
- Medicalization of Beauty: Science, safety, and transformative results now define the luxury market, with dermatologists and estheticians as trusted experts.
- The Art of Undetectable Treatments: “Notox” and “skinimalism” are in, as consumers prioritize natural, radiant skin that whispers wellness, not procedure.
- Cumulative Care: Demand is also increasing for results that build over time through consistent rituals and layered treatments, not one-off fixes.
- Whole-Body Glow: Skin health now extends beyond the face to the scalp and body, with increased attention on hormonal balance, hydration, and internal-external synergy.
- Regeneration Nation: Peptides, exosomes, and microbiome technologies are moving from fringe to foundation, signaling a new era of longevity-focused aesthetics.
Hydrafacial: Driving Provider Success in a
As consumer demand shifts toward regenerative, skin-first treatments, Hydrafacial strives to continue to be a powerful growth driver for providers:
- Clients come back more often: Hydrafacial consumers who visit a medspa receive an average of 3.6 Hydrafacial treatments per year.5
- An aesthetic gateway: Hydrafacial treatments serve as a starting point for deeper skin journeys, with 50 percent of clients purchasing an additional treatment or retail product during their visit.6
- Loyalty fuels word-of-mouth: Hydrafacial consumers return more consistently and refer more friends and family than with any other specialty facial treatment.7
Read the full Skintuition Report: Volume Three here.
1Is a tectonic shift about to happen in medical aesthetics? BCG.
2Kline’s
3Based on Corneometer, Vapometer, Cutometer, and 3D imaging measurements of 30 participants before and 24 hours after a Hydrafacial Platinum treatment in a clinical study. Instant results are measured 30 minutes after treatment. Individual results may vary.
4Based on review of published clinical studies for “hydradermabrasion” treatments in PubMed and Google Scholar as of
5Ipsos Study. 2025.
5Guidepoint Qsight - Sales Measurement from Full Year 2024. Qsight Sales Measurement data is based on point-of-sale transactions from 3,400+ US Aesthetics practice locations.
7NewBeauty Beauty Engine.
About The
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Forward-Looking Statements
Certain statements made in this document are “forward looking statements” within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. When used in this document, the words “estimates,” “projected,” “expects,” “anticipates,” “forecasts,” “plans,” “intends,” “believes,” “seeks,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “future,” “propose” and variations of these words or similar expressions (or the negative versions of such words or expressions) are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, conditions, or results, and involve a number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other important factors, many of which are outside The Beauty Health Company’s control, that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those discussed in the forward-looking statements.
Important factors, among others, that may affect actual results or outcomes include The Beauty Health Company’s ability to execute its business plan; consumers’ perception of skin health, skin concerns, and overall beauty trends; the ability to place delivery systems across various channels and locations; potential litigation involving The
Contacts:
Hydrafacial Media Contact:
jburchette@devriesglobal.com
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f4e27471-1e1e-4b32-8f2c-bd81887dd0e8
Source: The Beauty Health Company