Product claims have become one of the most powerful commercial levers beauty brands have on TikTok Shop, where the difference between a product that converts and one that scrolls by often comes down to a single word in the name or description.
Brands and R&D teams that map which beauty claims consumers are actively seeking can build products and positioning strategies to meet that demand at the exact moment it peaks. Most teams, however, are still relying on instinct rather than the real-time sales data that reveals which claims are actually moving products.
Key Takeaways
Charm data analyzing the top 1,000 beauty products sold on U.S. TikTok Shop from May 2025 to April 2026 reveals a clear and measurable relationship between specific language in product names and revenue performance. Claims and benefit-focused terms appeared in the names of 497 of those top 1,000 products, and the revenue numbers attached to each claim show exactly where consumer intent is concentrated.
"Glow" led all beauty claims at $168.1M in associated revenue, followed by "Hydrating" at $151.2M and "Smoothing" at $140.8M. "Moisturizing" and "Collagen" rounded out the top five at $126.0M and $117.1M, respectively, while "Volumizing" at $115.0M and "Firming" at $89.0M showed that structural and performance-oriented language is also generating meaningful revenue.
For R&D teams, the implication is direct: formulation priorities and naming conventions should be shaped by what is selling, not just what is scientifically differentiated. Each dollar figure reflects real purchases by TikTok Shop consumers who were drawn to that specific language and converted to it, making precise naming a commercial decision, not just a marketing one.
The dominant beauty claims are not staying within skincare. They are migrating across categories and body zones that open new product development territories, as Charm's tracking of beauty product video views from May 2025 to April 2026 shows three claims with sharply accelerating momentum: #hydratinglipgloss, #smoothlegs, and #brighterskin.
#smoothlegs reached 7.2M views in April 2026 with $112.5K in direct revenue, promoting razors, massage oils, and hair-removing creams, which signals that the smoothing claim is capturing demand across body care and not just the face. #brighterskin generated 3.9M views and $23.0K in revenue in the same month, tied closely to the #kojicacid conversation and primarily addressing dark spots and hyperpigmentation.
#hydratinglipgloss climbed to 2.5M views and $38.7K revenue in April 2026, showing that the hydration claim is powering lip care with serums, glazes, and balms in a category previously dominated by color-first positioning.
Among the individual ingredients gaining traction on TikTok Shop, kojic acid stands out as a case study in how an active can move from niche awareness to category-defining in a single year. The #kojicacid hashtag accumulated 227M views over 12 months across 18.7K product videos on U.S. TikTok Shop, with monthly views surging to nearly 40M by April 2026 and making it one of the clearest breakout ingredient trends in the beauty category.
The ingredient is frequently promoted alongside niacinamide and turmeric, with consumer conversations concentrating on dark spots, hyperpigmentation, and overall brightening. For R&D teams, this co-occurrence matters: shoppers are already being educated on ingredient stacking in real time, and formulations pairing kojic acid with niacinamide or turmeric may carry higher conversion potential because that combination is already expected.
The mechanism driving kojic acid's TikTok Shop performance is not awareness alone but the format in which the ingredient is demonstrated. Creator content centers on real-time visible results, where the brightening or peeling effect is captured on camera as it happens. The top three #kojicacid videos collectively generated over 36M views, and each followed the same playbook: show the product working on skin with a clear before-and-after implication.
@hangingwithalo (14.9M views) called it "literally peeling the hyperpigmentation right off," @ilovebubbies (12.0M views) said it would be perfect for anyone struggling with hyperpigmentation, and @milkaylarob (9.4M views) cited turmeric and kojic acid as "the key to fighting dark spots." The consistency of these angles tells something critical: formulations that produce immediate, visible, easy-to-communicate results have a structural advantage on TikTok Shop because they generate creator content that converts at scale.
TikTok Shop sales data is not just relevant for marketers. It is a direct input for suppliers, formulators, and product development teams that need to know where consumer demand is heading before committing to a roadmap. The signals in this data are actionable at the formulation and positioning level, but only if teams have access to it in a form they can actually use.
Charm's platform gives brands and their R&D partners visibility into the TikTok Shop metrics that matter most: which product claims are generating revenue, which ingredients are building hashtag momentum, which creator content formats are converting, and how those signals are shifting month over month.
Instead of reacting to trends after they have peaked, Charm equips teams to identify rising demand early and build the product strategy and promotional plan to capture it. Book a demo with Charm to see how TikTok Shop data can inform your next product launch or ingredient investment.