Newsweek International

Biggest Beauty Trends of 2024

FORGET LOSING YOURSELF TO FILLER AND Botox, laminated eyebrows and blinding white teeth. 2024 is going to be all about living better and living longer, and utilizing your own body to do so.

Newsweek spoke to leading experts and trendsetters within the beauty and wellness industries to bring you their top predictions for 2024 that you need to try out, including the best ingredients, treatments and products for you this year.

Ingredients

Mushrooms

Mushrooms first fused with beauty in 2005 when Dr. Andrew Weil and Origins launched the Mushroom Soothing Treatment Lotion, and experts will continue to endeavor to unlock the incredible powers of mushrooms into 2024.

“I find them fascinating, and I’m a big fan of skincare brands that harness the best of laboratory-derived ingredients alongside the best of botanicals,” Dr. Sophie Shotter, an aesthetic specialist in London, told. “From reishi to tremella to snow mushrooms, they are cropping up everywhere in skincare for their soothing and hydrating properties as well as for helping to address many skin concerns. We are just beginning to understand the power mushrooms can deliver—from

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek International

Newsweek International2 min read
Chris Perfetti
IF YOU’RE ONE OF THE MILLIONS OF AMERICANS SINGING THE PRAISES of ABC’s Abbott Elementary, fear not, they’ve heard you. “We love to hear it,” says Chris Perfetti, who plays Jacob Hill on the Emmy-winning sitcom about teachers at a Philadelphia public
Newsweek International1 min readPolitical Ideologies
Polls Panic
A soldier guards electoral kits on April 10 ahead of Ecuador’s referendum. Voters go to the polls on April 21 in a bid to reform the constitution and tackle security issues as the country struggles to control organized crime. Mexico has called for Ec
Newsweek International4 min read
AMERICA’S BEST Fertility Clinics 2024
PEW RESEARCH DATA RELEASED IN September 2023 showed that, as the average age at which American women first give birth rises, the use of fertility treatments is also rising: 42 percent of adults say they have used fertility treatments or know someone

Related