Open ten UGC creator portfolios and eight of them will have a beauty video in the first row. It's the easiest niche to start in — and that's exactly what keeps rates from climbing as fast as the work sometimes deserves.
What beauty UGC pays
Why the numbers look the way they do
Beauty draws the largest pool of active UGC creators of any category — makeup, skincare-adjacent, haircare, and fragrance content all overlap here, and a huge share of new creators start with a beauty video because the format (GRWM, first impressions, a quick review) is easy to shoot on a phone. More supply at every experience level compresses the low and middle of the range more than most niches.
What pulls it back up: beauty brands run more paid social advertising than almost any other consumer category, and a huge share of that ad spend is UGC-style content, not polished commercials. A brand that likes your organic video is very likely to ask for ad-usage rights next — and that's a separate, biddable right, not something to fold into your base rate for free.
Standing out in a crowded niche
- Pick a specific angle, not "beauty" broadly — acne-prone skin, mature skin, a specific price tier (drugstore-only, clean beauty), or a specific look. Narrow reads as expertise; generic reads as replaceable.
- Show finished product, not just raw footage — beauty briefs move fast, and a portfolio of edited, captioned videos gets picked over raw clips even when the raw content is technically better.
- Quote usage separately, always. A brand that only wanted organic use rarely says so upfront — ask, and price paid-ad usage as its own line.
How this works on Plug
Set your beauty rate once with the Rate Calculator, price the ad-usage add-on with the Usage-Rights Calculator, and put both on a real rate card you can send instead of re-quoting every DM.