A skincare brand isn't just buying a video — it's buying a creator whose word about the product won't get it flagged. That's the whole reason skincare rates sit above general beauty content, and it's worth understanding if you want to actually earn the premium instead of just hoping for it.
What skincare UGC pays
Why skincare is priced differently than beauty broadly
Color cosmetics content (makeup, hair, fragrance) is mostly aesthetic — did it look good on camera. Skincare carries more weight: brands are genuinely careful about the claims a creator makes on their behalf, because overpromising ("cleared my acne in a week") creates real risk for the brand, not just an awkward video. That caution translates into brands paying more for creators they trust to talk about a product honestly — routine, experience, how it felt — without guaranteeing outcomes.
The other factor: a convincing skincare video usually requires more from the creator than a beauty try-on does. You need a documented routine, some baseline knowledge of what the product actually does, and often a longer relationship with the product before you can talk about it convincingly. That's more creator investment, and it prices accordingly.
What actually earns the premium
- A consistent, shown routine — not a one-off "I tried this" but evidence you actually use the category.
- Language over guarantees. "This is what worked for my skin" outperforms "this will clear your skin" — both for the brand's risk and for how trustworthy you read to viewers.
- Real product knowledge. Knowing what an actual ingredient does (and being able to say so on camera) is a small thing that separates a $170 creator from a $280 one.
How this works on Plug
Price your routine-based rate with the Rate Calculator, and if a brand wants a claims-sensitive product on paid ads, get the usage terms in writing with the Usage-Rights Calculator and a real license — not a DM you'd have to dig up if a question comes up later.