There’s a useful piece of pro wisdom that consumer beauty content rarely shares: working makeup artists’ kits are usually a mix of drugstore and luxury products, chosen by category, not by price. The mascara might be Maybelline. The foundation might be Charlotte Tilbury. The setting spray might be a €10 drugstore find. The eyeshadow palette might be €60.

This isn’t about being frugal. It’s about knowing which categories benefit from spending more and which don’t. After watching how working artists actually build their kits, here’s the save-spend map that works.

Where drugstore wins

In these categories, the drugstore version is genuinely as good as the luxury version. Sometimes better. The active ingredients and base formulations are nearly identical, so you’re paying for packaging and marketing.

Mascara

The biggest open secret in professional makeup. Most working artists use drugstore mascara. The technology in a €10 Maybelline mascara is essentially the same as a €30 luxury one.

Best drugstore picks:

Skip the luxury equivalents. Even Lancôme and Dior mascaras don’t outperform these.

Brow products

Drugstore brow pencils and gels match the luxury versions almost exactly in performance. The brand prestige doesn’t translate to a better product.

Best drugstore picks:

Concealer

The drugstore landscape has caught up dramatically. Maybelline Fit Me Concealer rivals NARS Radiant Creamy at a fifth of the price.

Best drugstore picks:

Lip pencils

Almost no difference between €8 drugstore and €25 luxury lip pencils. The formula technology is mature; you’re paying for the brand.

Best drugstore picks:

Setting powder

This is where most consumers waste money. A €40 luxury setting powder does the same job as a €12 drugstore one.

Best drugstore picks:

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Where luxury actually matters

These categories genuinely benefit from spending more. The formulation, pigment quality, longevity, or finish makes a measurable difference. Working artists tend to invest here.

Foundation

The single category where luxury most consistently wins. Better skin-finish technology, more shade range, more nuanced undertones, more sophisticated wear properties.

Worth the spend:

Acceptable drugstore fallback: L’Oreal True Match (€12) is the closest drugstore comes to luxury foundation quality.

Cream blush

Worth spending €30-€50 here. The texture difference between cheap cream blushes (often dry, patchy, or chalky) and luxury (silky, blendable, long-wearing) is significant.

Worth the spend:

Eyeshadow palettes

For complex eye looks, the pigment quality and shade selection in luxury palettes genuinely outperforms drugstore. Cheap shadows are often dull, patchy, or fade quickly. Quality shadows stay vivid and blend cleanly.

Worth the spend:

Drugstore exception: Maybelline The Nudes palette (€12) is genuinely competitive in the neutral category.

Lipstick (premium formulations)

The texture, longevity, and finish of a €30 luxury lipstick from Charlotte Tilbury or Bobbi Brown is genuinely different from a €10 drugstore one. Comfortable wear, even pigment, doesn’t dry lips.

Worth the spend:

Setting spray (for events)

For everyday use, drugstore setting spray works. For event makeup that needs to last 8-10 hours through dinner, dancing, and photos, luxury wins.

Worth the spend:

Brushes (mid-tier minimum)

Real cheap brushes shed, deposit unevenly, and feel scratchy. Mid-tier brushes (€20-€40 each) are dramatically better. Investment-tier brushes (€50+) are marginal upgrades.

Worth the spend:

Where it depends

Some categories aren’t decisively save-or-spend. They depend on use case.

Skincare

Active ingredients (retinol, vitamin C, niacinamide, hyaluronic acid) are EQUIVALENT at the drugstore and luxury price points if you check the formulations. The Ordinary and CeraVe deliver identical clinical results to many luxury brands.

EXCEPT: Skinceuticals C E Ferulic at €175 genuinely is one of the most rigorously formulated vitamin C serums. Maelove Glow Maker at €32 is its closest dupe. Both are good. Choose based on budget.

Mascara primers and lash serums

Don’t pay luxury prices. Most lash serums with marketing don’t work. The ones that do (with peptides like Latisse-style isopropyl cloprostenate) work whether they’re cheap or expensive.

Eye liners

Liquid liners: drugstore wins (Maybelline Hyper Easy is excellent at €10).
Pencil liners: depends. Some luxury pencils (Bobbi Brown, MAC) glide much more smoothly than drugstore. Worth testing.

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How working artists build their kits

For aspiring or working makeup artists building a kit for paying clients, the math is slightly different than for personal use.

Why spend more on certain things for client work:

What you can still save on:

A working artist’s kit might be €800-€1,200 starting out. The mix is typically 60% luxury foundations, eyeshadows, and key cream products + 40% drugstore on the items where it doesn’t matter.

The total budget breakdown

For a complete makeup routine:

All drugstore route: €60-€80

Smart save-spend route: €150-€250

All luxury route: €400-€700+

The smart save-spend route is the sweet spot for most consumers AND for working artists building a starting kit.

The bottom line

The honest save-spend map:

Save on: Mascara, brow products, concealer, lip pencils, setting powder.
Spend on: Foundation, cream blush, eyeshadow palettes, key lipsticks, brushes, setting spray (for events).
Depends: Skincare actives (mostly equivalent), eye liners (formula-specific), lash serums.

This is genuinely the framework working artists use. There’s no shame in drugstore in the right categories — and no virtue in luxury in the wrong ones. The face that walks out of the kit looks the same either way when you choose well.

For a working artist’s full breakdown of how to build a complete kit on different budgets, the Paula Callan Masterclass includes a module on this. Worth a look if you’re starting fresh and want a structured approach.