There is a trend going around on TikTok aptly named "underconsumption-core." In these videos, influencers discuss how they either plan to or are actively cutting back on their spending, particularly as it pertains to fashion and beauty. For the latter category, people are going as far as starting "project pans," where they set aside a particular number of products every month, in hopes of using them enough that they start to see the bottom of the makeup's container.

"I don't think there's anyone who has a ton of makeup that's happy with the amount of product that they have," TikToker Elysia Berman , who is on a no-buy, where she doesn't purchase any beauty or fashion items for the entire year of 2024, says in one of her videos on the topic. "They all collectively agree that there was something else at play that caused them to buy that many products." For many people who grew up in the heyday of YouTube, beauty haul culture has become somewhat normalized.

Still, beauty products in particular feel like one of the easiest ways to satisfy the urge to shop, and as such it's become customary to see people with makeup collections that span multiple Ikea Alex Drawers and even dedicated beauty rooms. But at what point does all this overconsumption lead to hoarding? And are the products that we buy, especially as it pertains to our beauty routines really as necessary as they're made out to be? Keep reading to see how the beauty industry may be sneakily encouraging shopping addictions. .