British health officials have sounded the alarm over a disturbing new trend: ‘cosmeticorexia’, a growing addiction among pre-teen and teenage girls to aggressive anti-ageing and beauty products. Sources confirm that girls as young as 10 are using potent retinols, chemical peels, and even injectables, fuelled by social media influencers and unregulated online retailers. The result is a wave of chemical burns, scarring, and psychological trauma, prompting urgent calls for legislation.
Internal documents from the Department of Health and Social Care, obtained by this newsroom, reveal that ministers are being briefed on a ‘public health emergency’. One official described the situation as ‘a ticking time bomb’, with paediatric dermatology units seeing a 300% spike in cases over the past two years. ‘We have children presenting with adult-grade chemical burns because they want to look like filtered Instagram models,’ a senior consultant told me. ‘This is not about beauty. This is self-harm.’
The numbers are staggering. A leaked survey from the British Skin Foundation shows that one in five girls aged 11 to 16 has used a product clearly labelled ‘for adults only’. The marketing is ruthless: brands use cartoon characters and ‘tween-friendly’ packaging to sell retinoids and acids that can literally erode young skin. And the price? A single consultation for a botched peel can run into thousands of pounds. But the cost to mental health is higher. ‘I started using retinol at 12 because I was terrified of wrinkles,’ a 14-year-old from Manchester told my colleagues. ‘Now my face is permanently red and peeling. The girls at school call me “lizard skin”.’
The money trail stinks. The global ‘baby Botox’ market for teens is projected to hit £2.3bn by 2027, with the UK a key growth zone. Unaccountable beauty conglomerates are pouring cash into influencer campaigns that bypass age-restriction algorithms. One leaked memo from a major cosmetics firm boasted of a ‘new generation of lifelong customers’ by targeting 10-year-olds. ‘They call it “preventative skincare”,’ said Dr. Emma Harrington, a consultant dermatologist at Great Ormond Street. ‘That is a lie. For a child, this is assault.’ ‘The cosmetics industry has been left to police itself, and it has failed,’ said a senior source at the Department for Business and Trade. ‘We are looking at mandatory age warnings like alcohol or tobacco, but the industry is lobbying hard against it.’ Indeed, internal emails from a major trade body show plans to ‘delay and dilute’ any new regulations.
This is not a niche problem. This is a systemic failure. The same unaccountable power structures that gave us the opioid crisis are now selling chemical burns to children. The same regulatory capture that let banks launder billions is now letting beauty firms launder their reputations. ‘We need a full public inquiry,’ said Dr. Harrington. ‘And we need it now.’ The Health Secretary is expected to announce a consultation next week, but sources say the real push will come from a cross-party group of MPs who have seen the evidence. ‘This is not about banning glitter,’ one MP told me. ‘This is about stopping a generation of girls from being scarred for life.’
The trail leads from boardrooms to bedrooms. It leads from tax havens to teenage complexions. And it ends with a simple question: if we would not let a 10-year-old buy a cigarette, why are we letting them buy a chemical peel? The answer is money. And the bodies are piling up.









