I’ve been that girl counting coins at Sephora. Literally.
The Broke Girl Struggle: When Beauty Feels Like a Luxury

Let me create a picture for you: I was standing in line with a Too Faced concealer and a grande iced coffee in my hand, trying to decide which one had to go back because my checking account balance looked like a sad Wi-Fi signal. Spoiler, the coffee won. But I felt like a clown walking out empty-handed.
If you’ve ever felt broke in the beauty aisle, you are so not alone, because have you seen those make-up prices lately?
Let’s admit it, in 2025, the broke girl struggle is as real as it gets. Makeup prices keep climbing (even drugstore foundations are creeping into the $20+ range), inflation has made basic groceries cost more than a Kylie Lip Kit, and let’s not even talk about student loans sliding back into our DMs. Add in TikTok beauty hauls that make you feel like you “need” 18 new products every season, and yeah guess what our wallets never stood a chance.
But here’s the secret: being a broke girl doesn’t mean being a busted girl. It just means we have to get smarter — and sneakier — about how we spend. Over the years, I’ve tested every cheap makeup hack, broke girl money tip, and frugal girl workaround out there. Some flopped. Some actually changed my life (and my bank balance).
And because I don’t gatekeep, I’m spilling them all.
Drugstore Dupes That Beat Luxury (Yes, I Tested Them)

I need to start with my persoanl favourites and the holy grail of cheap makeup hacks 2025: dupes.
Here’s the truth: a $12 mascara that doesn’t smudge will serve you better than a $42 one that flakes like pastry crumbs. The beauty industry wants you to think expensive = better. My broke-girl reality check? Dupes work — and sometimes they work better.
Some of my personal fave makeup dupes that actually work:
- Mascara: L’Oréal Telescopic Lift ($12) vs. Too Faced Better Than Sex ($28). The L’Oréal one lengthens like crazy and doesn’t crumble by 3 p.m.
- Concealer: Maybelline Instant Age Rewind ($10) vs. NARS Radiant Creamy Concealer ($32). I’ve worn both on the same night out — nobody noticed.
- Foundation: e.l.f. Halo Glow Liquid Filter ($14) vs. Charlotte Tilbury Flawless Filter ($49). TikTok didn’t lie. Same glow, fraction of the price.
- Lip gloss: NYX Butter Gloss ($5) vs. Fenty Gloss Bomb ($21). The shine is there, babes.
You can also try before buying a high-end product, search TikTok with “[product name] dupe.” You’ll get 100 creators showing side-by-side comparisons — and you’ll save yourself $20–$40.
I once swapped half my beauty routine for dupes and realized I was saving $65 every single month. That’s rent money-level savings if you stick with it.
Skincare Hacks That Save $$$ Without Ruining Your Face

Confession: I used to believe you had to spend $$$ on skincare. Every glossy magazine convinced me I needed $80 serums or else my face would shrivel like a raisin. Wrong.
Some frugal girl hacks 2025 for skincare:
- Multi-use MVPs: Vaseline = lip balm, cuticle cream, makeup remover, slugging mask. $4 solves 10 problems. Aloe vera gel ($6) works as moisturizer, hair mask, AND after-sun.
- Affordable heroes: Korean skincare is where it’s at. Cosrx, Etude House, and Beauty of Joseon have legit products under $15 that dermatologists back.
- Sunscreen that slaps: You don’t need $40 SPF. Try Biore UV Aqua Rich ($13) or Trader Joe’s Daily Sunscreen ($9). Both are viral for a reason.
Another thing you should stop doing is layering 10 products just because influencers do so. Stick to cleanser + moisturizer + SPF. Your skin (and your bank account) will thank you.
The $5 Makeup Bag Rule (And How It Saved Me $600 a Year)
This is the rule that changed everything:
Never spend more than $5 a day on beauty.
let me be more clear. That doesn’t mean you buy a $5 product every day. It means if you average it out, your beauty spending shouldn’t cross $150/month (5 × 30).
How I made it work:
- I set a “one in, one out” rule. If I wanted a new lipstick, one old one had to go.
- I tracked how much I actually spent in a year. Spoiler: in 2022, it was $2,400. In 2023, with the $5 rule, it dropped to $1,800.
- That’s $600 saved, just by being intentional.
Move $150 into a “beauty fund” account each month. If it runs out, no new buys. That limit forces you to prioritize the products that really bring joy.
Subscription Traps: How I Quit Sephora Auto-Ship and Still Get the Goods

Beauty subscriptions are sneaky little vampires. I fell for a $25/month box once — thought I was saving money, but really I was collecting a drawer full of minis I never used.
Some traps I broke free from:
- Auto-ship refills: Sephora and Ulta will happily auto-ship that moisturizer every 30 days, even if your last one is still half-full. I canceled and just reorder when I need it.
- Subscription boxes: I swapped them for free sample sites like PinchMe and Influenster. Same joy of trying new stuff — $0 cost.
- Cashback apps: I now buy what I actually want and run it through Rakuten or Honey for 5–10% cash back.
Hack: Cancel all beauty subscriptions for three months. Keep track of how much you actually save. Spoiler: it’s a lot.
Makeup Bag Math: Cost Per Wear Is the Only Formula That Matters
Here’s a mindset shift that freed me from guilt: cost per wear.
Would you rather:
- Spend $28 on a lipstick you wear 3 times (=$9.33 per wear), or
- Spend $8 on a lipstick you wear 40 times (=$0.20 per wear)?
The $8 lipstick is the real investment.
I used to feel bad buying drugstore makeup, but when I realized my $200 leather jacket sat in the closet unworn while my $12 Maybelline mascara was getting used every single day? Yeah, that’s when the guilt flipped into empowerment.
Beyond Beauty: Hacks That Turn Broke Girl Energy Into Rich Girl Moves

Once I got my beauty spending under control, I started flipping that energy into extra cash.
Some hacks that actually worked:
- Sell half-used palettes & perfumes. Sites like Mercari, Depop, and Poshmark let you offload barely-touched products. I sold a $65 perfume I hated for $35.
- Fetch & Swagbucks. I literally scan receipts and get points for free gift cards. That “fun money” now pays for my mascara.
- Bundle sales. Selling makeup + clothes together moves stuff faster. One Depop bundle sale funded my haircut.
You can also create a little “beauty resale” jar. Every time you sell something, stash the cash — it becomes guilt-free beauty money.
Hacks Nobody Told Me (But Should Have)

Some random cheap makeup hacks 2025 I wish I’d known sooner:
These are the “secret menu” hacks — the things I wish my older cousin, my favorite influencer, somebody would’ve told me before I wasted money learning the hard way.
- DIY brush cleaner 2.0:
Dish soap + white vinegar = sanitizes AND deep cleans brushes. Put them in a cup with warm water + vinegar for 10 minutes before rinsing. Saves you from buying $15 brush shampoo. - Mascara reviver:
When your mascara starts drying out, add 2–3 drops of saline solution (contact lens solution) into the tube. Shake. Boom — another month of use. - Broken powder fix:
Dropped your $12 compact? Crumble the rest, add a few drops of rubbing alcohol, press it down with a spoon, let it dry overnight. Looks new. - Lipstick → cream blush:
Swipe a little lipstick on your finger, dab onto cheeks, blend. I’ve done this with a $6 NYX lipstick that doubled as blush all year. - Save your mascara wand:
When your mascara runs out, wash the wand and keep it. They’re perfect for taming brows or cleaning up clumpy lashes. - Sample-size stashing:
Sephora, Ulta, and even Target hand out samples if you ask. I once stretched a sample-size Clinique moisturizer for 3 weeks. Throw them in a travel pouch — saves you from buying minis. - Coconut oil multitasker:
$7 jar = makeup remover, hair mask, cuticle oil, shaving cream. Seriously, it replaces half the “specialized” products in your bathroom. - Eyeshadow as brow powder:
Instead of buying a brow kit, use a matte eyeshadow shade that matches your hair. Works just as well. - DIY setting spray:
Mix 1 part aloe vera gel + 3 parts water in a spray bottle. Shake. It hydrates and sets makeup like Urban Decay’s $30 version. - Extend your shampoo:
Add a little water to the bottle when it’s low, shake it up. You’ll squeeze another week out of it. (Or alternate washes with dry shampoo — I swear by Batiste or Dove, both under $7.) - Perfume layering hack:
Apply unscented lotion first, then spritz perfume. It makes cheap fragrances last all day, so you don’t overspray. - Nail polish hack:
Store polishes in the fridge. They last way longer, and don’t get clumpy.
- Perfume hack: Store bottles in the fridge to make scents last longer.
- Tinted cream dupe: Mix your moisturizer with foundation to DIY your own skin tint.
- Silk pillowcase hack: Swap $50 pillowcases for a $7 satin scarf — your hair and skin won’t know the difference.
None of these are huge on their own. But together? They’ve saved me probably $400+ a year just from stretching the life of products I already had.
Broke Girl, Rich Energy: My Final Thoughts
Here’s where it gets spicy — how to take your broke-girl resourcefulness and actually make or free up cash.
- Resell beauty empties (yes, really):
People buy empty perfume bottles, luxury makeup packaging, even candle jars on eBay and Mercari. I sold an empty Jo Malone bottle for $18. (People use them for décor or DIY dupes.) - Recycle = reward:
- MAC has Back to MAC: return 6 empty products, get a free lipstick.
- Lush gives you a free face mask if you return 5 black pots.
- Kiehl’s, Origins, and Innisfree also have return-for-rewards programs.
Translation: don’t throw empties away = free stuff.
- Cash in credit card points (smartly):
If you’re using a credit card anyway, redeem points for Sephora/Ulta gift cards instead of random stuff. I once turned 15k Chase points into a $150 Sephora spree. - Join loyalty programs strategically:
Instead of signing up for every one, pick your top 2–3 stores. Ulta’s rewards give you actual dollars off (not just samples). I saved $37 in one transaction last month just from points. - Stack gift cards & cashback:
Use apps like Raise or Gift Card Granny to buy discounted Sephora or Target gift cards (like $50 card for $45). Then run that purchase through Rakuten or Honey for cashback. That’s double savings. - Trade what you don’t use:
Start a “beauty swap” with friends. Everyone brings the half-used products they didn’t vibe with — you leave with new-to-you stuff for free. - Survey & receipt apps:
Apps like Fetch Rewards, Ibotta, and Swagbucks literally let you trade boring grocery receipts for Amazon gift cards. I cash these out for mascara or moisturizer. - Side hustle the skills:
Got good at nails, brows, or braiding hair? Offer $10 “friend prices” in your dorm or office. I used to do $15 brow waxes with a $7 kit from Sally’s — it funded my own routine. - Bundle your sales smartly:
Selling a lipstick alone = meh. Selling a “pink glam bundle” (lipstick + palette + pouch) = sells faster and for more. I once cleared out $120 worth of unused stuff in a weekend this way. - Content creator starter pack:
Review products on TikTok/IG (even dupes). Brands now send free PR to micro-creators. My friend started with Dollar Tree makeup reviews and now gets free skincare.
Hack: Create a “Beauty Hustle” envelope or bank folder. Any gift cards, cashback, or resale money goes there. That way your fun beauty purchases feel free — because technically, they are.
Because honestly? Broke girls are the most creative. We know how to stretch $20 like it’s magic. And that energy — that mix of resilience and resourcefulness — is exactly what turns a makeup bag into a money bag.
So next time you’re standing in Sephora with coins in your pocket and guilt in your chest, remember this: you are not less-than for buying the dupe. You are smart for making your money work harder. And that’s the real glow-up.


