K-Beauty defies seasonal slump with record $980 mn in April exports
Yun-Sang Ko
15 HOURS AGO
Korean cosmetics on display at a Galeries Lafayette department store in Paris, France
The global appetite for Korean beauty products shows no sign of slowing, with their exports in April surging 20% year on year to a record high, even during the industry’s quietest season.
According to trade data from the Korea Customs Service on Thursday, South Korea’s exports of cosmetics in April amounted to $980 million, up 20.1% from the same month last year.
This marked the highest ever April export value for Korean beauty products, driven by insatiable global demand for Korean skincare and color cosmetics.
Shipments to the US and China grew 10.0% and 11.6%, respectively, while those to Indonesia skyrocketed 145%.
In the January-March period, typically the slow season for cosmetics sales, the country’s beauty products’ exports hit a historic quarterly high of $2.49 billion, up 12.9% on-year.
At this pace, Korea’s annual cosmetics exports are on track to top $10 billion this year.
Tourists browse for Korean cosmetics at an Olive Young store in Seoul (Courtesy of News1 Korea) KOREA’S TOP 2 BEAUTY GIANTS STAGE A COMEBACK
Amorepacific Corp., the flagship cosmetics manufacturing unit under Amorepacific Group, logged 117.7 billion won ($85 million) in operating profit in the January-March period this year, surging 62% from the same period last year.
Sales rose 17.1% to 1.07 trillion won over the same period.
The company attributed the stellar performance to a 40.5% on-year increase in offshore sales, especially in North America, Europe and Asian markets excluding China, thanks to diversified brand and product portfolios.
Its overseas sales in the quarter reached 473 billion won, particularly led by Cosrx Inc., which was fully integrated as Amorepacific’s subsidiary in 2023 following a series of stake acquisitions.
The Korea-origin Cosrx has earned international recognition for its hypoallergenic skincare products designed for sensitive skin.
Amorepacific brands (Screenshot from Amorepacific's Q1 2025 earnings presentation) LG H&H Co., formerly LG Household & Health Care, reported consolidated operating profit of 142.4 billion won in the first quarter, down 5.7% from a year ago. Total revenue inched down 1.8% to 1.70 trillion won over the same period.
Its overseas sales, accounting for 32% of its total sales, added 4.2% on-year to 536 billion won, propelled by a 3.1% gain in North America and a 23.2% jump in Japan.
Derma and color cosmetics from its sub-brands – CNP, Hince and VDL – flew off the shelves in Japan.
Its home care and daily beauty products, specializing in hair care, oral care and body care, also recorded 36.6 billion won in operating profit for the quarter, up 13.7% on-year on sales of 573.3 billion won, up 2.2% across China, Japan and North America.
Nicky Hilton poses for a photo during a LG H&H luxury brand The History of Whoo promotional event at the global art fair Frieze New York 2025 on May 12, 2025. LG H&H is the official global partner of the art fair. (Courtesy of LG H&H) Their revival comes amid a broader K-beauty boom outside China, led by smaller crosstown rivals known as "indie brands," which have gained in popularity on online shopping platforms like Amazon.com.
Since 2023, several K-beauty products have ranked top in cosmetics sales during Amazon’s Prime Day event, with brands like Cosrx leading the pack.
Other Korean bestsellers on Amazon include Beauty Selection, VT Co., Goodal, Tirtir, Anua, d'Alba and Beauty of Joseon.
Mostly emerging in the 2010s, these brands leveraged low-cost, high-efficiency marketing campaigns through social media platforms like Instagram and TikTok, expanding their presence beyond China to developed countries, including the US and Japan.
Screenshot captured from APR's online press release Analysts said they are leading the K-beauty boom by diversifying their offerings beyond basic skincare to color cosmetics and beauty devices.
Especially agile in responding to market shifts, Korean cosmetics companies also leverage extensive value chains to bring products from concept to launch – including development, production and digital marketing – within three to four months.
In the 2010s, the K-beauty boom was fueled largely by explosive demand from China, powered by the so-called Korean Wave or Hallyu, while their presence in other foreign markets remained limited.
But that is changing. In the first quarter of this year, China accounted for 20.0% of Korea’s total cosmetics exports, closely followed by the US at 16.9% and Japan at 10.4%, according to data released by Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety last month.
Write to Yun-Sang Ko at kys@hankyung.com Sookyung Seo edited this article.