The best beauty brands don’t aways begin in a boardroom. Sometimes, they’re born in a family kitchen. And, for Beetl, that kind of sweet origin story is not just a sentimental footnote. It is the entire point.
Founded in 2022 by former marketer Kirsty Coates, Beetl skin care is built on something increasingly rare in modern beauty: lineage. Long before the brand existed, its formulations lived in the notebooks and dispensary of Coates’ mother, a doctor and herbalist who spent decades developing botanical remedies for families navigating sensitive, reactive skin. These were not products designed for shelves, but for real lives. When Coates’ own daughter was born with eczema, those same formulations resurfaced, offering relief where other options had fallen short. The decision to turn them into a business feels, in hindsight, almost inevitable.
What has followed is a kind of organic ascent that beauty insiders often try to manufacture but rarely achieve. Beetl has grown not through aggressive marketing, but through recommendation. The kind passed between mothers, shared in group chats, quietly endorsed in the language of lived experience. It is this intimacy that has shaped the brand’s identity, and perhaps explains why its growth, while rapid, does not feel forced. From just five stockists in its early days to more than 350 across Australia and New Zealand, its expansion has mirrored the way people actually discover products: gradually, and with discernment.
At the centre of Beetl’s appeal is a formulation philosophy that resists excess. Rather than building sprawling routines, the brand focuses on a tight edit of multi-use essentials, each designed to work across different stages of life. Its original anchors – the Baby Cream and Baby Balm – have become cult favourites among parents dealing with eczema-prone skin. And are underpinned by a trio of botanicals that feel both familiar and functional: calendula, chamomile and lavender. There is nothing trend-driven about these ingredients, and that is precisely the point. They are chosen not for novelty, but for their enduring, evidence-backed ability to calm and support the skin barrier.
More recently, that philosophy has expanded beyond the nursery. The launch of The Everything Oil and The Everything Wash marks a subtle but significant broadening of Beetl’s world, acknowledging what many of its customers were already doing – using the products themselves. The Everything Oil, in particular, encapsulates the brand’s approach. It is designed to move fluidly between uses: a facial oil, a body treatment, a bath addition, a solution for stretching skin during pregnancy. The Everything Wash follows suit, conceived as a gentle, all-over cleanser that respects the skin it touches rather than disrupting it.
What is striking is not just the versatility of these products, but the restraint behind them. In a market that often equates innovation with complication, Beetl offers an alternative vision of skin care. It is pared back, intuitive and grounded in ritual rather than routine. Skin care that integrates into daily life, rather than dictating it.
That sensibility extends to the brand’s visual language. Packaging is deliberately minimal, designed to sit unobtrusively within the home. There is a considered neutrality to it, a refusal to lean too heavily into either the clinical or the whimsical. Instead, it occupies a space that feels quietly modern. And aligns with a generation of consumers interested in both how a product fits into their environment and performs.
Of course, growth has followed. Sales have surged, repeat customers have returned, and Beetl has steadily expanded its retail presence. This includes a recent move into Priceline Australia. But to frame the brand purely through that lens would be to miss the more interesting story.
Because Beetl’s rise speaks to a broader shift in beauty culture. There is a growing appetite for products that feel grounded, for brands that prioritise function over flourish, and for formulations that can be understood without a glossary. In this context, Beetl’s appeal becomes clearer. It is not trying to reinvent skincare. It is simply refining it.
And perhaps that is why it resonates. In an industry that often moves at speed, Beetl skin care offers something slower, more considered. A reminder that sometimes, the most compelling ideas are the ones that have been there all along, waiting to be passed down.