How Homegrown Indian Beauty Brands Are Finally Formulating for Indian Skin
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 03, 2026, 07:34 IST
How Homegrown Indian Beauty Brands Are Finally Formulating for Indian Skin
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
For decades, the beauty shelves in Indian homes were stacked with products made for someone else's skin, lighter, drier, less melanin-rich. Homegrown Indian brands are changing that, building formulations around the actual concerns of Indian skin. This is what that shift looks like, and why it took this long to arrive.
The Shelf Was Never Built for You
Indian skin is not one thing, it spans Fitzpatrick types III through VI across the country, carries a higher baseline melanin density than the skin most global formulations were tested on, and lives in climates that swing between 90 percent humidity in coastal Kerala and the desiccating dry heat of a Rajasthan summer. A single formulation cannot answer all of that. The multinational brands mostly did not try.
What Indian Skin Actually Needs
Dermatologists at AIIMS and in private practice across Indian metros have been pointing this out for years. The formulation gap was real and documented. The gap in who was listening closed only when homegrown brands started building products from those clinical observations upward, rather than adapting a foreign brief downward.
The Ingredient Turn
Brands like Minimalist, Dot and Key, and Plum built their early reputations on transparency, publishing the concentration of every active, citing the dermatological basis for each formulation choice. That was new. The Indian beauty consumer had been sold on opacity for decades: a proprietary blend, a secret formula, a celebrity's word. The shift to legibility changed what the buyer expected to know before she spent her money.
What the Multinationals Missed
Hard water, high in calcium and magnesium, is standard across most of North and Central India. It affects how surfactants perform, how residue builds on skin, and how a toner's pH interacts with what the tap water left behind. A formulation team based in Mumbai or Hyderabad notices this in user feedback within weeks. A team in Paris or New York does not have the same feedback signal.
The Shift Is Not Finished
What has changed is the frame. The question Indian beauty brands are now asking is not how to localise a global product. It is what Indian skin requires that no existing product provides. That is a different starting point, and it produces different answers.
The brands that built their credibility on ingredient transparency and clinical specificity have also, quietly, changed what Indian consumers expect from a beauty purchase. You now read the label. You ask what concentration the niacinamide is at. You know that melanin-rich skin needs SPF as much as lighter skin does, possibly more, and you are less willing to accept a formula that leaves a cast. That expectation did not come from nowhere. It came from brands that treated Indian skin as the brief, not the afterthought.