Beautycounter relaunch as Counter skincare line 2025 arrives after a turbulent chapter — I know it’s unsettling if your favorites will survive. This guide summarizes the relaunch timeline, product mappings, ingredient changes, where to buy, and what to watch next.
Quick relaunch timeline and overview
To start, the most important facts: Counter (the rebrand of Beautycounter) launched softly on June 25, 2025, after founder Gregg Renfrew reacquired the business following a bankruptcy process. Beautycounter officially closed in April 2024; its prior sale to private equity (Carlyle Group) and ensuing leadership turmoil led to that outcome. Renfrew delayed a reintroduction until late 2024 to rebuild supply-chain and product foundations before the June soft launch and a broader rollout planned for fall 2025.
The relaunch intentionally shrank the assortment — Counter opened with roughly 50 SKUs versus Beautycounter’s prior 245 — focusing on core clean skincare and a limited makeup selection; fragrance is temporarily on hold. The business model shifted away from a 60,000-strong direct-sales consultant network to a smaller, community-focused brand partner program and direct-to-consumer owned retail (a store on Nantucket is open now).
This condensed approach aims to reestablish trust and operational stability: about 75–80 percent of Counter’s team are former Beautycounter employees, supply-chain disputes were settled (some vendors accepted settlements as low as 10 cents on the dollar), and leadership prioritized measured, standards-driven messaging over big publicity.
Product lineup, mapping and notable reformulations
Moving from overview to specifics: Counter’s assortment was intentionally curated to relaunch best-in-class skincare and keep the clean-beauty promise intact, while phasing older SKUs back in more slowly.
Below is a concise mapping of representative legacy products to Counter equivalents and what changed in formulation or position at launch.
| Legacy Beautycounter | Counter name / role | Reformulation / note |
|---|---|---|
| Countermatch regimen | Counterglow | Upgraded components; rebranded positioning toward glow + hydration |
| Countertime serum | Counter Super Serum | Core serum retained but reformulated for potency and stability |
| Multiple older SKUs (cleansers, oils) | Curated selection in 50-SKU launch | Some formulas upgraded; many legacy products may return later |
Key takeaways: some flagship regimens were carried over but with deliberate formula updates (for example, a serum relabel as a “Super Serum”), while many other items were omitted from the initial catalog and are expected to return over time if demand and ingredient sourcing align.
Ingredient standards, safety stance, and testing
To address the top concern — will safety and transparency remain? — Counter publicly retained Beautycounter’s hallmark safety stance: the “Never List” ethos remains central. The company continues to position itself in support of stronger cosmetics regulation and builds on advocacy work around the Modernization of Cosmetics Regulation Act (MoCRA) passed in 2022.
That said, many products were upgraded or reformulated during the relaunch. Practical guidance: when deciding whether to repurchase, compare the full ingredient lists of the legacy formula and the Counter product page. Counter has signaled it will emphasize standards and education, but the relaunch did not uniformly publish third-party certifications for every SKU at launch. Where available, look for explicit testing or certification claims on each product page; if a favorite has been reformulated, ingredient comparisons will show where actives, preservatives, or carrier oils differ.
Where to buy: channels, partner model, and what changes for customers
Transitioning from product details to buying channels: Counter is prioritizing owned retail and direct sales via its own commerce channels. The company currently has no near-term plan to re-enter large national retailers; the Nantucket store is the first owned retail location, with more company-owned stores expected.
The former consultant model has been restructured: independent sellers are now called “brand partners.” Counter limits partner recruitment and will not transfer Beautycounter consultant client databases to the new partner program. Operationally, that means:
- purchases will come through Counter’s site and owned stores, and
- community-based partner sales will use personal affiliate links instead of the old direct-sales infrastructure.
This change may disrupt prior buying relationships or loyalty touchpoints for long-time customers; if you previously relied on a consultant for personalized service, plan to reconnect through Counter’s official channels or the limited brand-partner network.
Pricing, subscriptions, and loyalty — what’s known and what’s uncertain
Price and subscription details were not comprehensively published at launch. Counter’s public materials emphasize a curated assortment and premium positioning, but specific MSRP, subscription rollouts, or loyalty program replacements were left unspecified. Areas to monitor:
- Whether legacy price points are preserved or adjusted upward after reformulations and SKU consolidation.
- If subscription or auto-replenishment programs relaunch, and whether prior subscriber accounts or rewards will migrate.
- How affiliate revenue replaces consultant commissions and what that means for long-time customers who relied on discounts or community offers.
Given the unresolved details, expect short-term uncertainty in pricing and loyalty benefits; Counter’s advice so far is to sign up for direct brand updates and to save individual product pages for historical ingredient and pricing records.
Quick checklist to verify your favorites
To make this practical for repeat buyers, use the following steps before repurchasing or switching routines.
- Compare the full ingredient list of your old Beautycounter product with the Counter product page, focusing on active ingredients and preservatives.
- Save or screenshot legacy product pages/labels (if available) and new product pages so you can track changes over time.
- Sign up for Counter updates for announcements on product returns, subscriptions, and partner programs.
- If you previously bought through a consultant and relied on that relationship, ask your consultant whether they joined the brand-partner program and how they intend to support you.
Two important notes: Counter will not automatically give brand partners access to prior consultant client lists, and the company limited partner spots — so community access may look different than before.
What remains uncertain — a short watchlist
Counter is a careful relaunch but not everything is fixed. Watch these items over the coming months:
- Complete SKU rollouts: which legacy products will return and when.
- Detailed pricing, subscription/autorefill structure, and loyalty program replacements.
- Publication of third-party testing or certifications for reformulated products.
- Any expansion into larger retailers or new owned retail openings beyond Nantucket.
Each of these affects whether a product is the same, cheaper or more expensive, or available where you prefer to shop.
Conclusion
If you’re a longtime Beautycounter customer, the relaunch as Counter delivers clarity in some areas and reasonable uncertainty in others: the company kept its core safety ethos and advocacy stance, narrowed its assortment to roughly 50 SKUs with targeted reformulations (Counterglow and a Super Serum are notable examples), shifted distribution to owned retail and affiliate-style brand partners, and retained much of its former team. For immediate decisions, prioritize ingredient comparisons, save product details, and watch Counter’s official updates for pricing, loyalty and broader SKU returns. This approach should help you keep using products you trust while deciding whether Counter’s new formulations and shopping model meet your clean-beauty standards.