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Article: Why Our Teen Skincare Line Is Only Three Steps (On Purpose)

Why Our Teen Skincare Line Is Only Three Steps (On Purpose)
week-of-2026-07-06

Why Our Teen Skincare Line Is Only Three Steps (On Purpose)

The average tween skincare routine now runs six steps, layers roughly eleven potentially irritating active ingredients, and costs about $168 a month. Only about a quarter of those routines include sunscreen. Those numbers come from a study published in the journal Pediatrics, and they are the reason we built our teen line the way we did.

We built it by taking things out.

The problem is not the kids

Researchers at Northwestern analyzed 100 skincare routines posted by TikTok creators between the ages of seven and eighteen. One of the dermatologists on the study, Dr. Molly Hales, noted that the majority of the children in these videos did not have acne. They had perfect, clear skin. They were not treating a problem. They were performing a routine the internet had convinced them they needed, and in the process many were introducing their skin to allergens it will have to negotiate with for years. Allergic contact dermatitis is not a weekend phase. Once you sensitize skin to an ingredient, that door does not fully close.

We have one rule at Free Living Co. that sits underneath everything else: the enemy is never the consumer. It is definitely not a twelve-year-old with a gift card and a For You page engineered to make her feel like her face is a fixer-upper. She is doing exactly what she was told to do by a system that profits every time she feels like she is not enough. She is not the problem. The eleven ingredients are.

How we got here

I spent seventeen years in medical device sales and executive roles before I opened this shop, so I know how an industry talks itself into things. I know what it sounds like in the room when a growth target meets a new demographic. The Sephora-kids phenomenon did not happen by accident. Certain brands became status objects on middle-school campuses because that is exactly what they were engineered to be. Anti-aging serums got marketed, directly or by osmosis, to children who have no age to fight yet. Dupe culture taught them that the answer to an expensive product is a cheaper version of the same eleven ingredients, not fewer ingredients. This is overconsumption dressed up as self-care, and it is very good business.

Here is the part I have to own. I am in the beauty industry now, and I benefit when people buy skincare. So when I tell you to buy less of it, know that I am arguing against my own short-term interest, and doing it anyway, because I would rather build something still trusted in ten years than sell a preteen her first case of contact dermatitis.

What we actually built

When we launched Live Free Skincare with a teen focus earlier this year, the loudest conversations in development were not about what to add. They were about what to leave out. The line is three products: a cleanser, a toner, and a moisturizer. That is the routine. There is no serum with an active a fourteen-year-old cannot pronounce or need. There is no retinol for a face that has not started aging. There is no ten-step ritual designed to manufacture three new insecurities on the way to solving one.

Three steps is a point of view about what young skin needs, which is this: to be cleaned gently, kept in balance, and moisturized, so its own barrier can do the job it was built to do. The rest of the industry spent a decade selling kids acids and actives that strip that barrier, then selling them more products to repair the damage. It is a little vindicating that the broader market is now catching up to the boring position. Skinimalism and barrier repair are the headline trends of 2026. For anyone who has stood in the clean-living aisle for a few years, it reads less like a trend and more like an apology.

About that sunscreen

Back to the one product only a quarter of those kids were using. Children are spending $168 a month layering exfoliating acids that increase sun sensitivity, and then skipping the sunscreen, which is the single most protective thing a person of any age can put on their skin. We do not make a sunscreen, and I want to be clear about that. Free Living Co. recommends a mineral sunscreen, and we will help you find one we trust, but we do not sell a Live Free SPF, because we are not going to put our name on a category we have not gotten exactly right just to complete a routine. If a brand will sell a preteen a nine-step system but cannot be bothered to make sunscreen the non-negotiable center of it, that tells you what the routine is actually for.

What I would tell a parent

My whole origin story is a mom story. I got into this because I wanted better for my own family and could not get a straight answer about what was on my own bathroom counter. So here is the honest version. Wash your face with something gentle. Keep the skin balanced. Moisturize. Wear a mineral sunscreen every single day. That is a complete routine for the vast majority of teenagers, and it costs a fraction of $168. If there is real, persistent acne, and sometimes there genuinely is, that is a conversation with a dermatologist, not with an algorithm and a full checkout cart.

And maybe the most important part, the part no product can sell you: your kid does not have a face that needs fixing. The routine industry needs her to believe she does. You get to be the counterweight. You are smarter than the feed. Your kids can be too. Trust that first.

Sources: Pediatrics study on tween and teen TikTok skincare routines (Northwestern Medicine, 2025); CNN health coverage; EWG Guide to Sunscreens.

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