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Are luxury beauty advent calendars a rip-off?

2024-11-09 20:00:02

They’re all over your TikTok and Instagram – people unboxing the latest extravagant beauty advent calendar.

Influencers excitedly wonder what eyeliner, serum or hand cream will be behind door one, and gush over the beautiful box it has come in.

But are these products, which can cost hundreds of pounds, actually worth the money?

Yes, says TikToker Cissy Jones from Manchester.

We’re just over a week into November and the 27-year-old, who is a social media manager at fashion brand PrettyLittleThing but also makes TikToks on her personal account, has already posted a dozen advent calendar videos. Everything from chocolate, to beauty products and wine, and even a Pets At Home calendar for her dog.

"There’s one - the Harrods 12-day one – where every product in it is something that I would buy," she says. "So I’m saving money."

That idea of saving money is something that brands latch on to with their marketing. A calendar may cost £250 but it’s actually "worth £1,000", they say, if you add up all the individual items.

"But you do have to want the actual products," says Cissy. "Otherwise, it’s a bit of a waste of money."

Cissy Jones says there is massive interest in beauty advent calendars online

Retailers can afford to make such seemingly good offers because there’s a lot of margin built into beauty products, analysts say.

And rather than aiming to make a big profit on them, they view advent calendars as a marketing tool to get you to buy more products afterwards.

"A lot of retailers recognise advent calendars are a great way of getting new products to the consumer and a way to get them to convert," says Natalie Berg from NBK Retail.

However, Sarah Johnson from Flourish Retail says that while there are many lovely bespoke calendars out there, "a lot [of companies] just use advent calendars to shift stock that may not be popular, rather than having to discount it".

The size of the items in advent calendars can vary – with some offering full-sized bottles, some smaller versions, and some a mix of the two.

But smaller sizes may be what people want, says Ms Berg, as it's common to want to try something out before fully committing.

Advent calendars are a great way of trying products she's seen on social media, says Holly May Arnott, who has started posting unboxing videos on TikTok herself

Holly May Arnott agrees. "They’re a fantastic way to try new and trending products that I might have seen previously on social media," she says.

The 26-year-old has been buying beauty calendars for several years now. It's something she and her mum do together.

"It’s like prolonging that Christmas morning thrill," she says, adding a sense of excitement throughout December.

The most expensive one she's bought was from Selfridges, which was "such a luxury".

But she says while beauty calendars "can feel like a bit of an investment, they’re worth it for us".

With so many products out there, Cissy Jones’s advice is to look for a brand you like and to look for value for money, in terms of the total cost of all the items individually versus the price of the calendar.

However, even if a product may seem like good value for money, for some, spending more than £200 on an advent calendar is simply a luxury they cannot afford.

Nihal doesn't think it is worth paying hundreds of pounds for a calendar unless you're going to use every product in it
Many beauty calendars are already sold out, such as these from Sephora and Harrods