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The secrets behind the South Korean cosmetics boom: K-pop, Kardashians and churn

Visitors exploring exhibition booths and beauty-related products during Seoul Beauty Week.
Visitors explore exhibition booths and beauty-related products during Seoul Beauty Week on Aug. 28. The exhibition featured 300 participating companies.
(Chris Jung / NurPhoto / Getty Images)
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  • South Korea has dethroned France as the biggest cosmetics exporter to the U.S., with over $10 billion in annual exports driven by K-beauty’s global popularity.
  • The secret is rapid product development: Manufacturers such as Cosmax can launch new products in three to six months, compared with one to three years elsewhere.
  • Low barriers to entry fuel entrepreneurship, but intense competition means over 8,800 cosmetics brands went out of business last year.

Jo Min-Su was working toward a computer science doctorate at one of South Korea’s best universities when he stumbled on his calling: building a better lip gloss.

The 30-year-old sat near his booth at Seoul Beauty Week, pulled out a stick of his brand — named Blup — and gave his upper lip a dewy pink glow-up.

“Nobody trusts a founder who doesn’t use his own product,” he said, smacking his lips.

Jo is one of the tens of thousands of entrepreneurs looking to strike it rich on the seemingly insatiable global demand for beauty products from South Korea.

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Following in the slipstream of the superstars of K-pop, K-beauty has become a massive global business.

Los Angeles fans of South Korean imports flocked to KCON LA 2025 at the L.A. Convention Center in August. At the music and cultural festival, they saw top K-pop idols and lined up for K-beauty at skin care booths.

The three-day convention — which had more than 350 booths and attracted more than 100,000 people from around L.A. and the country — was sponsored by South Korean health and beauty giant Olive Young, which plans to open its first U.S. outlet in L.A. early next year.

The secret of K-beauty’s success has been the unlikely alliance of big manufacturers and small entrepreneurs to develop and supply a steady stream of new products to consumers and the “skinfluencers” who help them lock in on the latest lotions.

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K-pop and its fandom leans heavily on the internet, but KCON offers a unique opportunity for fans to get up close with their favorite idols and online friends.

Miyeon of South Korean girl group I-dle visits a makeup brand's pop-up store
Miyeon of South Korean girl group I-dle visits makeup brand Wakemake’s pop-up store in Seoul last year.
(Chosunilbo JNS / ImaZins / Getty Images)

Popular for offering unique and affordable products — such as sunscreens that don’t leave white smears while doubling as moisturizers — South Korean cosmetics have dominated some social media feeds in recent years. Whether it is Kim Kardashian on Instagram or deals from Walmart or Target, consumers who care about cosmetics are getting constant updates on the ever-changing trends.

That online buzz has catapulted South Korea’s cosmetics exports to more than $10 billion. Last year, it dethroned France — home of beauty royalty brands such as L’Oréal and L’Occitane — as the biggest exporter of cosmetics to the United States.

Unlike South Korea’s other marquee exports — semiconductors and automobiles — beauty product exports are largely backed by smaller companies. Two-thirds of last year’s cosmetics exports came from small and medium-sized firms such as Blup, according to the Korea International Trade Assn.

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What has emerged is the hope that anyone, with the right product and a little bit of luck, can make a fortune in K-beauty. Since 2013, the number of registered cosmetics sellers in the country has increased sevenfold, to more than 27,000 last year.

The K-beauty trend took off in Los Angeles and across the country during COVID-19 pandemic emergency, when people were locked at home, online, thinking about self-care and exploring alternatives to well-known brands, said Sarah Chung Park, the founder and chief executive of Landing International, an L.A.-based company that connects K-beauty brands to American retailers.

“Because of COVID, TikTok really boomed, and I think that was a way for people to discover K-beauty brands and then those brands went on Amazon and converted that virality to sales,” she said. “Pretty much every Korean brand has capitalized on that.”

The obsession with skin care among Gen Alpha is leading to a windfall of unexpected business for the booming $164-billion global skin-care industry, which historically has targeted women, not girls

The Cosmax building in Seongnam, South Korea
Cosmax is a major cosmetics manufacturer in South Korea. Above, the Cosmax building in Seongnam.
(Tina Hsu / For The Times)

Behind most of the budding brands is a handful of manufacturers such as Kolmar and Cosmax.

The cosmetics manufacturers behind many of the latest brands are largely invisible to ordinary beauty consumers. Unlike other global players such as L’Oreal or Estée Lauder, Cosmax has never sold directly under its own name, specializing almost entirely in research and original design manufacturing, or ODM.

Cosmax was founded in 1992 and has grown into the largest cosmetics ODM in the world, supplying 4,500 brands from its factories in South Korea, China, the U.S. and Southeast Asia. And at a time when some of the most well-known beauty brands are in decline or stuck in single-digit growth due to consumer fatigue, Cosmax reported a record $1.7 billion in revenue last year — a 22% increase from 2023.

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The company is a primary reason South Korean beauty startups have been able to take off so quickly, flooding global markets at a pace that competitors in other countries struggle to match. Cosmax accounted for around 26% of all of South Korea’s cosmetics exports last year.

It has a unique ability to develop and launch new products rapidly while still making money supplying even the smallest brands, said Lee Kyung-soo, the company’s 79-year-old chairman and founder.

Two men posing for a portrait in an office next to a large window
Lee Kyung-soo, 79, chairman of Cosmax, is shown with his son, Lee Byung-joo, 46, the company’s chief executive.
(Tina Hsu / For The Times)

“From the point a brand comes to us with an idea, we can supply them in as little as three to six months,” he said. “In other markets, that can be anywhere between a year to three years. They just can’t compete with South Korea when it comes to speed.”

‘K-pop Demon Hunters,’ an American-made film, has gained a huge audience in South Korea, thanks to its nods to Korean folklore, pop culture and habits.

Few clients are too small for Lee, who has made sure that Cosmax will fill custom orders as small as 3,000 units. The company supplies companies with billions of dollars a year in revenue, and also Blup, a three-person lip gloss startup.

Kang Seung-hyun, the senior managing director of Cosmax’s research unit, estimates that the company releases around 8,000 new products annually. By the end of any given year, each of the company’s 1,100 cosmetic scientists will have worked on the development of 80 to 100 products, enabling Cosmax and its domestic peers to, as Kang puts it, “carpet-bomb the global market with novel products.”

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Bottles of different shades of foundation on a shelf in a room that showcases products that the company has manufactured for brands and also newer products developed by researchers at the COSMAX building in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea, on Wednesday, August 20, 2025.

Bottles of different shades of foundation on a shelf in a room that showcases products that the company has manufactured for brands and also newer products developed by researchers at the COSMAX building in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea, on Wednesday, August 20, 2025. (Tina Hsu/For The Times)

a man in a white lab coat stands for a portrait

Kang Seung-hyun, 54, senior managing director of the R&I center, stands for a portrait at the COSMAX offices in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea, on Wednesday, August 20, 2025. (Tina Hsu/For The Times)

The list of Korean beauty trends that have been adopted as staples around the world is long: BB creams, ampoules, face masks and pimple patches.

Having big manufacturers such as Cosmax do the heavy lifting enables many with little experience in cosmetics to join the K-beauty free-for-all. Among the beauty newbies: a scandal-ridden politician’s daughter, a seafood retailer and a stationery maker.

“Anyone can do it. The barrier to entry isn’t high at all,” said Lee Sun-young, the founder of fruit-based cosmetics startup Kikiglow. “And the market is all about indie brands right now.”

As little as $20,000 in starting capital will get beauty entrepreneurs their first batch of product from a reputable cosmetics manufacturer in a matter of months. E-commerce platforms such as TikTok Shop enable them to sell to global consumers directly. The only things they need are a concept, a set of thumbs and a knack for social media.

Inside the convention hall, Kikiglow’s booth was swarmed by influencers wielding camera sticks as they lined up for free samples. Giving products away to as many influencers as possible, hoping it will go viral, is an essential part of this game.

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“The people will stop coming once the samples run out,” Lee said.

To be sure, the fierce competition from the constant churn of new hot products and more affordable options from China and elsewhere makes it harder to stand out, succeed and retain customers. Meanwhile, the different tariffs coming out of the White House are making some cosmetic imports more expensive and less competitive in the United States.

The Cosmax logo on a wall inside a building
The Cosmax logo adorns a wall inside the Cosmax building in Seongnam.
(Tina Hsu / For The Times)

“In the past, consumers would stick with a brand for 10 years or so and become extremely loyal,” said B.J. Lee, who runs Cosmax’s business in the U.S. and is a son of the founder. “But with K-beauty, the ups and downs are extreme. New brands are coming out all the time, and people are constantly chasing the next exciting thing.”

Last year, according to government data, over 8,800 cosmetic brands went out of business in South Korea.

Against such headwinds, Blup’s selling point is that it can get the colors of lip glosses just right, using artificial intelligence to analyze consumer preferences and skin tones.

The company is on track to record around $100,000 in sales by the end of the year and has plans to expand in Japan, Jo said.

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“I’m still not satisfied with where we are,” he said. “There are so many entrepreneurs who are crushing it.”

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