The in-cosmetics Global 2026 Trend Report: Floor Signals Skip to main content
The in-cosmetics Global 2026 Trend Report: Floor Signals
By 2026.04.19.

Most trend reports are written from press releases. This one isn’t.

I spent two days at in-cosmetics Global 2026 in Paris — the world’s largest ingredient show — interviewing the people who actually build the science behind your favourite beauty products.

Formulators, R&D directors, innovation leads, biotech founders. The people who know what’s coming 2–3 years before it lands on a shelf. 1,000+ exhibitors. 14,000 attendees. 250+ new ingredient launches in the Innovation Zone alone.

Me on Day 1 at the expo

I sat through several sessions — including WGSN’s deep dive into GLP-1 consumers, K18’s hair longevity biology talk, and a nutricosmetics panel that had a full room on a Wednesday afternoon. And I walked the floor with one goal: find out what the ingredient industry is actually building right now, not what the press releases say.

The world’s largest gathering of cosmetic ingredient suppliers, where what ends up on shelves in 2028 gets decided today.

What came back was consistent. Longevity. Multifunctionality. Beauty from within. Proof over promise. Speed.

This report is my attempt to make sense of it and more importantly, to translate what’s happening at the ingredient level into what it means for brands, marketers, and anyone building in the beauty and supplement space right now.

Let’s get into it.

Macro Signal #1: Longevity Is No Longer a Trend, It's the Default

I went into this show expecting longevity to be one of several themes. It wasn’t. It was the theme.

Every single interview I did on the floor — across skincare, haircare, suncare, nutricosmetics — longevity came up. Every supplier brought it up themselves.

Dr. Cornelia Schürch from Mibelle Biochemistry put it plainly:

“I think nobody will come around longevity. Longevity is the password currently.”

She’s right. And the ingredient pipeline confirms it.

Mibelle Biochemistry brought some of the most science-backed longevity actives at the show.

What’s changed is the level of specificity. Two years ago, longevity was a claim. A positioning. A word you put on a serum. Now it’s becoming a formulation strategy and a much more precise one.

The science has moved from broad anti-aging to targeting the individual hallmarks of aging. There are 14 of them — cellular senescence, mitochondrial dysfunction, epigenetic alterations, stem cell exhaustion, and more. Brands used to say “fights aging.” Now suppliers are launching ingredients that address hallmark 4, or hallmarks 6 and 9 specifically.

 

  • Mibelle’s EpiSnow tackles 8 out of 12 hallmarks of aging through epigenetic modulation — reversing the biological clock using snow algae. 
  • Algaktiv Vitals targets the telomere-mitochondria axis specifically. Chronolea from Robertet addresses oxidative stress, cellular senescence and extracellular matrix degradation simultaneously.

Brittney Wallat from Hallstar summed it up well: the shift is from saying…

“this is good for longevity as a whole” to “this addresses these specific antagonistic hallmarks, and here’s the data.

Haircare Has Fully Entered the Conversation

This was probably the biggest surprise for me personally. K18‘s session on Day 1 reframed the entire haircare category. They are mapping all 12 hallmarks of aging to the hair follicle — treating hair not as a cosmetic surface but as a biological system with a health span.

A slide deck that looked more like a pharmaceutical R&D presentation than a beauty brand session.

The goal is no longer repair. It’s prevention. Not fixing damaged hair but extending the functional health of the follicle itself.

And the ingredient floor backed this up. 

  • Keraduo from LipoTrue is a biomimetic fusion protein combining keratin and collagen to improve follicle anchoring. 
  • ProCell BaiCare uses RNA-engineered plant exosomes to regulate gene expression in scalp tissue.

Hair longevity is not a sub-trend. It’s the next skincare.

What this means for brands:

decrease
Vague longevity claims are already losing credibility.
gps
The ingredient suppliers are moving to hallmark-specific positioning, which means brands briefing generically will fall behind.
clipboard
The opportunity is to get specific — pick the hallmarks most relevant to your consumer, find the ingredients that target them with clinical data, and build your story around that precision.

Macro Signal #2: One Product, Multiple Effects — The Multifunctionality Shift

Consumers are done managing 10-step routines.

What I heard consistently across the floor is that the brief has fundamentally changed. Brands are no longer asking for the best moisturizer. They’re asking for a moisturizer that also activates SPF when the user steps outside, supports long-term skin health, and feels good enough to actually use every day.

One product. Multiple effects. No compromises.

Fabrice Lefèvre from Givaudan framed it well. In the consumer journey there are three steps — brand loyalty, texture, and claim. Consumers now expect all three to land in a single product. And they expect quick results and long-term results simultaneously.

At Givaudan Active Beauty’s booth, visitors could literally see the science work. A live AI-powered facial scan showed in real time how their nerve fiber regeneration active would transform skin over time.

Fernanda Soro from Sentient Technologies confirmed the texture dimension: “The more sensorial a product is, the more you can stimulate the five senses, the better.” K-beauty’s second wave is pushing this further — lighter textures, new formats, new sensations — but now layered on top of genuine functional complexity underneath.

The Innovation Hub ingredient list showed this playing out at the formulation level. Ingredients being launched aren’t single-claim actives anymore

  • ILUMYS from Greentech targets pigmentation and radiance simultaneously. 
  • Osmolya from Expanscience handles hydration and barrier in one mechanism. 

Marble 7 from Melt&Marble is positioned as a 3-in-1 bio-active lipid for skin, scalp and hair.

Greentech’s booth was a reminder that French biotech has been quietly leading ingredient innovation for over 30 years.

The SPF angle is particularly important. Brittney Wallat from Hallstar pointed out that the biggest shift in sun care briefs right now is skinification — consumers want UV protection embedded into their daily skincare, not as a separate beach product. The brief is no longer “make a good sunscreen.” It’s “make a skincare product that also has serious sun protection.”

What this means for brands:

struggle
Single-function products are becoming a harder sell. Not impossible, but harder.
management
The brands gaining ground are the ones building genuine multi-benefit systems where each claim is actually substantiated, not just listed on the pack.
arrows
The challenge is that multifunctionality is easy to claim and hard to deliver.

That gap is where the opportunity is.

Macro Signal #3: Beauty From Within Has Moved to the Main Stage

A packed room on a Wednesday afternoon at an ingredient show tells you something.

The From Gut to Glow panel — a full nutricosmetics discussion with R&D directors, brand founders, and trend forecasters — had standing room only. That wouldn’t have happened three years ago.

The nutricosmetics market is currently valued at $7–9 billion and growing at 7.8–8.5% annually. But the number that matters more than market size is behavioral: consumers are no longer treating ingestible beauty as an occasional add-on. They are treating it as a daily wellness ritual — the same way they treat supplements. The shopping behavior, the compliance patterns, the channel preferences — all moving toward wellness retail and DTC subscription, away from prestige beauty.

The session that confirmed nutricosmetics is no longer a niche — it’s the category connecting longevity, microbiome science, and the future of beauty from within.

Sephora is already responding. The retailer is actively phasing out supplements from its shelves. The category doesn’t belong in a beauty store anymore. It belongs in a wellness ecosystem.

Rinki Pramanik from Urenew Beauty, who has spent the last three years focused entirely on this category, was direct about where the biggest commercial opportunity sits right now:

“There is a huge tappable consumer gap at the moment — people really do not understand the collagen science enough.”

Collagen peptides are currently the largest nutricosmetics category, followed by ceramides and omegas as the next wave.

But the science is moving faster than the market. Christina Vegge, VP of R&D at Probi, outlined the gut-skin axis mechanism in detail — microbiome metabolites traveling via the bloodstream to the skin, promoting barrier function, dampening inflammation, and inhibiting accelerated aging of fibroblasts. The science is not speculative. The clinical evidence is building.

What’s still missing is clinical proof on real people – diverse, large-scale human trials, not just lab results. Pramanik put it plainly:

“The level of in vivo clinical testing we see in topical skincare — we need to see the same depth in nutricosmetics. Multi-country testing across different demographics, across different ethnicities. Only then does the trust automatically build.”

The format conversation was equally revealing. Dominika Andrys from Beauty Brand Formula argued that format is what drives repeat purchase — not the ingredient. A brilliant active in a format consumers won’t use daily is a commercial failure. 

Mallory Huron from Future Snoops added the cultural layer:

“We’re in the era of seeking joy wherever we can find it. If a product has a lovely texture, a lovely scent, and it’s seamless to use — they’re going to adopt it and it’s going to become integral to their daily routine.”

Science wins long term. But format gets you in the door.

What this means for brands:

supplement
Beauty from within is not a niche play anymore. It’s a mainstream category with a massive education gap and education gaps are brand-building opportunities. 
storytelling 3
The brands that invest in clear, simple science storytelling, combine it with compelling daily formats, and back it with real clinical data will define this category for the next decade.
unlike
The ones that lead with buzzwords and weak dosages will lose trust fast.

Macro Signal #4: The GLP-1 Consumer Is a New High-Value Beauty Audience

This one caught the industry off guard.

One in eight US adults have already tried GLP-1 medications. 25-30 million projected users by 2030. 

Semaglutide patents expired in China and India in March 2026 — just weeks before this show. More than 50 generic brands are already preparing to launch in India alone. The mass market phase of GLP-1 adoption is not coming. It has started.

A full breakdown of how weight loss medications are reshaping body care, skincare, wellness, and fragrance — and why the brands that move first will own a category that barely exists yet.

But the beauty angle is what matters here. 40% of GLP-1 users are already spending more on beauty. 80% report improved self-confidence after starting the medication. This is not a sick consumer. This is an engaged, high-spending, appearance-motivated consumer with very specific new needs and almost no products designed for them yet.

The physical concerns are well documented. 

  • 80% worry about loose, sagging skin. 
  • 51% notice their overall skin looking worse. 
  • 47% are losing facial fullness. 

On top of that — hair thinning, dehydration, and a body that’s changing faster than most products can keep up with. Nutrient depletion from long-term use. New body zones emerging — the arms, the hands, even what users on Reddit are calling “Zempic feet.”

But the emotional dimension is just as important and far less discussed. Many GLP-1 users experience a disconnection between how fast their body is changing and how they feel inside it. Body care becomes a tool for emotional recalibration, not just physical maintenance.

Ingredient manufacturers are already responding. 

  • Provital’s Intensilk mimics caloric restriction pathways directly. 
  • SC Labs launched SC Dietskin Tighter specifically targeting elasticity loss from weight loss. The mitochondrial energy actives — NAD+, NMN — are positioning themselves for the skin vitality gap that GLP-1 creates.

Fragrance is also being reshaped. Reduced food intake is driving what WGSN calls hedonic substitution — fragrance filling the sensory and pleasure gap left by changed eating habits. At the same time, nausea and scent sensitivity in higher-dose users is creating demand for quieter, low-intensity formats.

What this means for brands:

earnings
This consumer exists right now and is actively spending. 
success
The brands that name them, speak to their specific concerns, and build products around their journey — rather than retrofitting existing SKUs — will have a significant first-mover advantage.

The window is open. Not for long.

Macro Signal #5: Biotech Means Nothing If It Doesn't Deliver Results.

Walk the floor at in-cosmetics Global and you will see the word “biotech” approximately every 3 meters.

Fermentation. Precision fermentation. Biotech-derived. Bio-engineered. Biosynthesized. The language is everywhere. And that’s exactly the problem.

Dominika Andrys from Beauty Brand Formula, who has spent 15 years in product development, said it directly on the From Gut to Glow panel:

“Today biotech is positioned as innovation more because of how the ingredients are made, not how the ingredient feels on the skin and how it performs. That is a B2B story rather than a function of the ingredient. Consumers don’t buy a fermentation process or a laboratory process. They buy results.”

She’s right. And the formulators in the room knew it.

Rinki Pramanik pushed it further from the brand side:

“Why are you calling it biotechnology? Have you used a process of biotechnology during development? Is your sourcing story biotech? Unless there is true integration of biotechnology, just do not use the word for the matter of a buzzword just because it’s trending.”

The second problem is scalability. A biotech active that works beautifully in a lab setting but can’t survive a 50,000-unit factory batch is not a commercial ingredient. It’s a press release. 

None of this means biotech is wrong. The technology is genuinely powerful — precision fermentation is cutting environmental footprints by a factor of 10 in some cases, solving sourcing problems that traditional extraction can’t. 

Givaudan won a COP30 award for their biotech hyaluronic acid production. That’s real innovation.

But real biotech innovation is measured in results and scalability.

What this means for brands:

genetic engineering
Using “biotech” as a shorthand for innovation is increasingly a credibility risk. Formulators and informed consumers are getting better at asking the right questions. 
success story
If you’re using a biotech-derived ingredient, the r needs to go beyond the process to the clinical outcome, the scalability, and the consumer-facing benefit. 

Process is a footnote. Results are the headline.

Macro Signal #6: Sustainability Has Grown Up

Sustainability used to be a story. Now it’s a standard.

That shift was visible everywhere at in-cosmetics Global 2026 — in the Sustainability Zone, the Upcycling Hub, the supplier booths, and the interview conversations. But the most important shift wasn’t the volume of sustainability messaging. It was the quality of what brands and suppliers are now demanding from each other.

Hands-on testing of the newest textures, formats, and sensorial innovations from exhibitors across the floor.

Vague green claims are losing traction. Fast.

Fernanda Soro from Sentient Technologies framed the change well:

“In the beginning we saw this behavior much more in German consumers, in French consumers. But now we can see it everywhere — even Asia is becoming more sustainable, Latin America is becoming more sustainable.”

The demand is no longer regional. It’s global. And it’s moving from consumer preference to commercial expectation.

The TRASCE traceability alliance — a consortium of 15 cosmetics companies including Chanel and Susonity — is a signal of where this is heading. Full supply chain transparency. Ingredient origin tracking from source to shelf. 

Upcycling has quietly become a formulation strategy rather than a sustainability footnote. The Upcycling Hub at the show featured ingredients built from coffee cherry waste, onion extraction residues, pineapple rhizomes, and upcycled lignin. 

  • Provital’s Intensilk is derived from upcycled apple blossom. 
  • Lipoid Kosmetik’s Cascara Pro from upcycled coffee cherry. 

These aren’t compromise ingredients. They’re performing actives with a circular sourcing story attached.

Biotechnology is also being reframed through a sustainability lens. Dr. Cornelia Schürch from Mibelle was clear about why:

“We use biotechnology so as not to harvest from the fields, not use fields and soil, but to do it in bioreactors — constantly, without being dependent on seasons and harvests.” 

Less land use. No seasonal dependency. Consistent quality. The sustainability case for biotech is stronger than the innovation case in many instances.

What this means for brands:

recycle 1
Sustainability without data is greenwashing and consumers and retail buyers are increasingly capable of telling the difference. 
trustworthiness
The brands that will lead are not the ones with the most sustainability claims on pack. They’re the ones who can show the supply chain, prove the impact, and make it part of the product story in a way that’s honest and specific.
security
Circular sourcing and biotech production are now legitimate competitive advantages, but only when backed by transparency.

Innovation Spotlight: The Ingredients Worth Watching

250+ new ingredients launched at this show. Most won’t make it past a formulator’s bench. These ones will.

Exosomes were the most concentrated new technology cluster — EXOVIVE LIFT from DSM-Firmenich, PhytoCellTec Exosomes from Mibelle, Cellexora MD from Vytrus. Cell communication technology is arriving at commercial scale and the clinical data is starting to catch up with the hype.
Longevity actives dominated the Innovation Hub. EpiSnow from Mibelle tackles 8 out of 12 hallmarks of aging through epigenetic modulation. AST4 from Normactive targets FOXO3 longevity signaling. Chronolea from Robertet addresses oxidative stress, cellular senescence and extracellular matrix degradation simultaneously. These are not broad anti-aging claims anymore — they are mechanism-specific, hallmark-targeted formulations.

Every booth in the Innovation Hub represented years of R&D, clinical testing, and sourcing decisions — compressed into a single display card

PDRN (Polynucleotide) alternatives were everywhere. AlgaSurge from Lucas Meyer combines HA-like hydration with PDRN-like regeneration from marine biotech. Portulaca PDRN from GFC Life Science targets skin regeneration through plant-derived pathways. The market wants PDRN-level results without PDRN-level costs and sourcing complexity.
Neurocosmetics went from concept to commercial category. PrimalHyal NeuroYouth from Givaudan targets the newly identified Neuro Skin Aging pathway. Neurophroline from Induchem reduces cortisol-driven skin damage. The skin-brain axis has moved off the trend slide and onto the ingredient shelf.
The GLP-1 ingredient pipeline is already forming — quietly. Intensilk from Provital mimics caloric restriction in adipocytes. SC Dietskin Tighter from SC Labs directly targets elasticity loss from weight loss. The market is formulating for this consumer before most brands have even acknowledged they exist.
ICON Hair longevity confirmed its arrival as a standalone category. PhytoSpherix Hair from Mibelle supplies energy to follicles. Keraduo from LipoTrue combines keratin and collagen to improve follicle anchoring. The K18 biology session and the ingredient launches are telling the same story — hair care is becoming health care.

Closing: What's Next

in-cosmetics Global 2026 is done.

Three days, one city, and enough signal to keep any brand strategist busy for the next two years.

The ingredients are being built. The science is moving. The consumer behavior is shifting. 

The brands that will win the next chapter of beauty are not necessarily the ones with the biggest budgets or the most recognizable names. They are the ones paying attention right now. The ones connecting longevity science to consumer identity. The ones building genuine multi-benefit systems instead of single-claim products. The ones speaking to consumers — the GLP-1 user, the longevity-minded millennial, the wellness-first shopper — who are already spending and waiting for someone to actually talk to them.

The industry is at an interesting inflection point. The science has never been more advanced. The consumer has never been more engaged. And the gap between what’s possible and what’s actually on shelves has never been wider.

That gap is the opportunity.

Ambitious goals need smart execution. Let’s make it happen.

Schedule your Discovery Call.