Spring Reset 2026
What Beauty Supply Shoppers Are Ready to Try This Season
As the industry enters Spring 2026, Beauty Supply shoppers are not simply restocking — they are resetting.
A recent survey of 108 verified Beauty Supply regular users reveals that shoppers are actively seeking change across categories, with clear signals for store owners on where to focus inventory, messaging, and merchandising this season.
1. Spring Is About “Lighter, Easier, and Refreshing”

| Owner Insight: Highlight lightweight textures, quick-application formats, and clear “spring refresh” messaging across hair, makeup, and body categories. In addition, emphasize lighter, brighter, and wearable color options to align with shoppers looking to subtly update their look for the season. |
2. Category Priorities for Spring 2026

1) Makeup Leads Spring Interest (69.1%)
Makeup emerges as the top category shoppers are most interested in trying this spring.
Among those interested in makeup:
52.94% are primarily looking at Face products (foundation, concealer, powder, blush, contour)
The dominance of Face products signals that Spring 2026 is less about bold experimentation and more about refining complexion and enhancing natural skin.
Lip and eye products remain relevant, but primarily in support of everyday, wearable looks rather than statement-driven trends.

Brighter or more dramatic shades such as red (14.63%) and black (10.57%) trail significantly behind.
The data suggests that Spring 2026 makeup interest centers on subtle refresh rather than bold transformation. Shoppers are leaning toward wearable, everyday shades that enhance rather than redefine their look.
| Owner Insight
Prioritize base makeup — foundation, concealer, and complexion-enhancing products should anchor your spring assortment. Prioritize soft pinks, nudes, and warm neutrals across lip, blush, and nail assortments. These tones align with how shoppers intend to update their look — through subtle, flattering color shifts rather than high-contrast statements. Spring is about natural refinement and wearable freshness — inventory should reflect that balance. |
2) Skincare Follows Closely (54.5%)

Skincare ranks second, signaling continued consumer focus on skin health as weather transitions. Shoppers are prioritizing skin resilience and radiance over texture alone. Sensitive-skin-specific needs appear as a more niche segment this season.
| Owner Insight
Spring skincare merchandising should prioritize hydration, barrier repair, and glow-enhancing products at the forefront. Messaging that emphasizes skin health and radiance will resonate more strongly than seasonal texture positioning alone. |
3) Hair & Scalp Care Remains Core (53.66%)

Hair and scalp care remains a foundational category this spring, but the priorities reveal a shift toward control and hair health. Damage repair, curl definition, and heat protection follow as secondary needs, while traditional dandruff concerns rank significantly lower this season.
| Owner Insight
Front-face frizz-control, smoothing, and anti-humidity products for spring visibility. At the same time, expand assortments around hair thinning and density-support solutions — this concern ranks equally high and represents a strong opportunity for problem-solving SKUs. Moisture remains critical, but shoppers appear to want hydration that supports smoothness and fullness rather than heavy repair treatments. |
3. What Drives New Product Trial in Spring 2026
1) Promotions and Recommendations Reduce Trial Barriers

The data shows that price promotions and discounts rank among the strongest motivators for trying new products.
Closely following is staff recommendation, reinforcing a key strength of the Beauty Supply channel: personal interaction.
Packaging, “Spring” or “New” messaging, and product testers also contribute — but financial reassurance and human guidance remain the primary confidence builders.
This suggests that shoppers are not unwilling to experiment — they simply want reduced risk.
| Owner Insight
Trial increases when hesitation decreases. |
2) The $10–14 Range Is the Comfort Zone for Experimentation

The strongest response cluster falls within the $10–14 price range, followed closely by $5–9.
Interest drops noticeably once pricing moves above $15, with $20+ representing a psychological barrier for many shoppers. This reinforces a key pattern seen across the survey: Spring 2026 experimentation is controlled and budget-conscious.
Consumers are open to trying something new — but within a defined comfort range.
| Owner Insight
The $10–14 range is a strategic sweet spot for introducing new SKUs. |
3) Freshness and Value Drive Store Revisit Intent
When asked what would make them visit a Beauty Supply Store more often this spring, two themes clearly dominate: value and visible newness.

The word cloud reveals that terms like discount, sale, price, coupons, and samples appear most frequently, underscoring the continued importance of financial incentives in driving repeat traffic.
However, price alone is not enough.
Shoppers also repeatedly mention:
- New product launches
- Greater color variety
- Skincare-focused updates
- Testers and free samples
- Knowledgeable, helpful staff
The data suggests that revisit intent is strongest when stores combine perceived savings with a sense of discovery.
Spring 2026 shoppers want to walk into a store and feel that something is new — whether that’s through fresh shade ranges, new product drops, promotional events, or updated displays.
| Owner Insight
Refreshing endcaps, rotating featured SKUs, and visibly updating displays can increase perceived novelty — even without major inventory expansion. Seasonal storytelling at shelf level matters. Also, to increase store frequency this spring:
In Spring 2026, shoppers return when stores feel both valuable and dynamic. |
