Poll
Why is "clean beauty" just a marketing scam that preys on your insecurities?
As consumers become more ingredient-conscious and cost-aware in 2026, the 'clean beauty' label faces scrutiny for lacking regulation and often commanding premium prices. Cast your vote on whether this trend is genuine progress or marketing hype.
Options
Live results
Vote first to see results.
Emoji reactions
No reaction selected.
Comments
Please sign in to comment.
Share / embed
Quick info
- How do I vote in the "Why is "clean beauty" just a marketing scam that preys on your insecurities?" poll?
- Select one option on the page to cast your vote; results update with community votes in real time.
- Can I view results without voting?
- Yes. Use the "I don't know / Show results" option, or access the results summary after voting.
Similar polls
Up to 10 suggestions from the same category and shared tags, sorted by vote count; this poll is excluded.
From the same category
Fashion, Style and CosmeticsThe same site category as this poll.
- Would you ever try a fully virtual
- Would you ever drop your entire routine for a multi-brand capsule wardrobe?
- Are you ditching luxury hair tools for multi-functional Korean device routines now?
- What’s your take on solid shampoo bars for curly hair — game changer or disappointment?
- What's your take on thrifted vintage denim vs. high-street dupes in 2024?
- Do we actually hate fast fashion, or just the feeling that we can’t afford it?
- Do viral TikTok serums really work, or just hype?
- Minimalist makeup vs bold glam — which look ages better over time?
- Is "clean beauty" just a marketing scam to make you pay more for shorter shelf life?
- Has 'de-influencing' actually changed how you shop for skincare this year?
TrendVersus.com · live data