Brazilian skincare has gone from a regional curiosity to a category international buyers track, and the entry point is usually the same two names: Natura and O Boticário. Both are excellent for body care and fragrance, but neither leads on serums, retinol, or sunscreen the way the new generation of Brazilian dermocosmetic brands does. If you want the deeper skincare catalogue, you need to look past the two anchors.
This guide compares 7 Brazilian skincare apps and brands worth installing or shopping in 2026, with a focus on what each one does better than Natura or O Boticário. The picks include direct-to-consumer brands, multi-brand marketplaces, and one global retailer with strong Brazilian shelf presence. For broader coverage, see our best Brazilian beauty apps roundup and the Natura vs O Boticário head-to-head.
Quick comparison
| App / brand | Best for | Closest to | Strength | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granado | Body care and pharmacy basics | Natura | 150 years of pharmacy heritage, gentle formulas | Smaller treatment skincare range |
| Sallve | Active skincare and routines | Neither | Brazilian-made retinoids, AHAs, niacinamide | Direct-to-consumer only, no app for now |
| Beleza na Web | Marketplace breadth | Both | Brands neither Natura nor Boticário carries | Less premium curation than Sephora |
| Época Cosméticos | Premium dermocosmetics | Boticário | Black Tag returns, dermo and luxury depth | Pricier than Beleza |
| Sephora | Imported premium brands | Neither | Beauty Insider rewards, international launches | Smaller Brazilian-brand shelf |
| Avon | Mass-market skincare | Natura | Same Natura&Co group, cheaper price points | Brand image less premium |
| Drogaria São Paulo / Pague Menos | Dermocosmetics at pharmacy prices | Neither | Vichy, La Roche-Posay, Eucerin in one app | Counter-style UX, not beauty-first |
What makes Brazilian skincare different
Three things matter when you compare Brazilian skincare apps to international ones. Get these straight before you pick.
- Sun-first culture. Brazil’s SPF category is the most developed of any market. Anthelios, Episol, Photoderm, and Vichy Capital Soleil have local versions tuned for tropical climates. Buying sunscreen from a Brazilian app or pharmacy means tinted, high-PA, and waterproof formulas that international stores rarely stock.
- Pharmacy-brand depth. Brazilian pharmacies stock dermocosmetics the way Sephora stocks makeup. La Roche-Posay, Avène, Vichy, Eucerin, Bioderma, and CeraVe all have larger Brazilian SKU lists than they do in the US.
- Local actives. Açaí, cupuaçu, andiroba, copaíba, and breu branco appear in formulas from Granado, Natura, Sallve, and Eudora. None of them are required for results, but they are the Brazilian-skincare signature, and they show up in marketing copy and shelf placement.
The 7 picks below check at least one of these strengths. Each entry names where it sits in the catalogue map.
The picks
1. Granado — best for body care and pharmacy heritage
Granado has been on Brazilian shelves since 1870 and now spans skincare, fragrance, body care, and a kids range. The skincare line is conservative compared to dermo-active brands, but the body, hand, and foot care catalogue is exceptional. The glycerine bar, lavender talc, and Pink range are the products international buyers usually try first.
Where it falls short: the treatment skincare range (serums, retinoids, acid toners) is thin compared to Sallve or pharmacy dermo brands. Pick Granado for body, not for actives.
Pricing: mid-tier. A 300 g body cream sits around R$60-90; the Pink Eau de Toilette is R$280 for 100 ml.
Platforms: iOS, Android, web. The Granado app handles direct shopping, store finder, and loyalty.
Bottom line: the right pick if you came in for Natura’s body care and want a similar shelf with a different identity.
2. Sallve — best for actives and modern routines
Sallve launched in 2019 as a digital-first Brazilian skincare brand built around Julia Petit and a team of dermatologists. The catalogue is small on purpose: a vitamin C serum, retinol, niacinamide, AHA toner, sunscreens, and cleansers. Each product is designed to fit into a five-step routine the brand documents on its site.
Where it falls short: no dedicated app in 2026, web ordering only. International shipping is limited.
Pricing: R$80-140 per product. A 30 ml vitamin C serum is around R$120.
Platforms: web only (sallve.com.br).
Bottom line: the right pick if you want Brazilian-made dermo actives without a pharmacy detour.
3. Beleza na Web — best for marketplace breadth
Beleza na Web is the largest Brazilian beauty marketplace, now part of Magalu. It carries professional hair lines (Wella, Kérastase, Truss), dermocosmetics (La Roche-Posay, Vichy, Bioderma), and Brazilian niche brands the Natura and Boticário apps will never stock. Magalu integration means the same delivery and customer service backbone as Brazil’s biggest retailer.
Where it falls short: less premium curation than Sephora. Counterfeit risk is low on first-party stock but higher on Marketplace listings.
Pricing: wide range. Mass-market hair through to luxury skincare.
Platforms: iOS, Android, web. The app handles ordering, Magalu integration, and Wishlist syncing.
Bottom line: the best single Brazilian app to buy across mass, pharmacy, and prestige skincare brands in one cart.
4. Época Cosméticos — best for premium dermocosmetics
Época Cosméticos sits in the premium dermo and perfumery tier. The Black Tag loyalty programme returns a percentage on repeat spend, and the catalogue carries Estée Lauder, Lancôme, Clinique, and Brazilian premium brands the mass-market apps skip.
Where it falls short: smaller skincare catalogue than Sephora at the prestige end, and the loyalty programme works better for repeat buyers than one-off purchases.
Pricing: premium tier. Prestige skincare sets sit R$300-1,000+.
Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
Bottom line: the right pick if you came in for O Boticário’s loyalty rail and want a premium upgrade.
5. Sephora — best for imported premium brands
Sephora’s Brazilian arm carries the global Sephora catalogue (Drunk Elephant, The Ordinary, Glow Recipe, Tatcha) plus a small Brazilian shelf. The Beauty Insider programme works the same way it does globally: points on every purchase, free shipping at higher tiers, birthday gifts.
Where it falls short: Sephora is not a Brazilian-brand specialist. The local catalogue exists but is smaller than what Beleza na Web or Época carry.
Pricing: premium tier with some mass-market crossover.
Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
Bottom line: the right pick if you want international skincare brands shipped within Brazil and a loyalty programme that works across products.
6. Avon — best for mass-market price points
Avon is now part of Natura&Co, the same group that owns Natura and The Body Shop. The catalogue covers skincare, makeup, fragrance, and body care at price points well below Natura. The Renew anti-ageing line and Avon Care basics are the most-shopped categories.
Where it falls short: the brand image still skews to door-to-door selling. The dermatological credentials are thinner than Sallve or pharmacy brands.
Pricing: mass market. Most skincare under R$50.
Platforms: iOS, Android, web. The Avon app supports both consumer ordering and representative tools.
Bottom line: the right pick if you want Natura&Co quality control at a cheaper price.
7. Drogaria São Paulo / Pague Menos — best for dermo at pharmacy prices
The two largest Brazilian pharmacy chains both stock the full dermocosmetics catalogue: La Roche-Posay Anthelios, Vichy Capital Soleil, Avène, Bioderma, Eucerin, and CeraVe. Pricing is typically below the brand-direct apps, and the loyalty programmes (DSP Vantagens, Sempre Vale) return points on every purchase. Both apps handle prescription and OTC ordering, plus dermo skincare.
Where it falls short: pharmacy UX is counter-style, not beauty-shopping-first. Browsing skincare feels less editorial than Sephora or Beleza.
Pricing: mass to premium dermo. A 50 ml Anthelios fluid sits R$80-110 depending on the promo.
Platforms: iOS, Android, web. Both chains run separate apps.
Bottom line: the right pick if you want Anthelios and Vichy without the brand-direct markup.
How to pick the right one
Match the profile that matches you. Each maps to one app or brand.
- You want body care and fragrance like Natura but a different identity: Granado.
- You want modern actives (retinoids, vitamin C, niacinamide) from a Brazilian brand: Sallve.
- You want the widest beauty marketplace in Brazil: Beleza na Web.
- You want premium dermo and luxury skincare with a strong loyalty programme: Época Cosméticos.
- You want imported premium skincare shipped in Brazil: Sephora.
- You want Natura&Co quality at half the price: Avon.
- You want pharmacy-priced dermocosmetics: Drogaria São Paulo or Pague Menos.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best Brazilian skincare brand?
There is no single answer. Granado leads on body care and fragrance, Sallve leads on Brazilian-made actives, and Natura leads on broad catalogue depth. For dermo skincare (sunscreens, prescription-adjacent products), buy international dermocosmetic brands through Brazilian pharmacy apps where they are cheapest.
Are there Brazilian skincare brands that ship internationally?
Yes. Sallve, Sol de Janeiro (US-owned but Brazilian-inspired), Granado, and Natura all ship to several countries. Coverage varies by SKU. Sephora and Sephora-equivalents in your country usually carry one or two Brazilian brands on the shelf.
Is Sallve worth it compared to The Ordinary?
If you want a Brazilian-made dermo brand with Brazilian climate and skin types in mind, yes. If you only care about price per active ingredient, The Ordinary is cheaper. Sallve’s packaging, formulation, and customer support are stronger than The Ordinary’s at a comparable price.
Where can I buy La Roche-Posay in Brazil at the best price?
Brazilian pharmacy chains (Drogaria São Paulo, Pague Menos, Raia) usually undercut brand-direct and Sephora pricing on Anthelios sunscreen and Effaclar lines. Beleza na Web matches pharmacy pricing on promotions.
Are Natura and Boticário enough for a full skincare routine?
For body care, fragrance, and basic facial cleansers, yes. For active treatment skincare (retinol, vitamin C, acid toners, prescription-strength formulas), no. Add Sallve, a pharmacy dermo brand, or a Sephora pick to fill the gap.
Bottom line
The Brazilian skincare shelf is wider than Natura and O Boticário, and each of the 7 picks above takes a slice the two anchors do not cover. Granado owns body care, Sallve owns modern actives, Beleza na Web wins on marketplace breadth, Época Cosméticos and Sephora cover the premium tier from different sides, Avon undercuts on price, and Drogaria São Paulo and Pague Menos put pharmacy-priced dermocosmetics in one tap. Start with the profile that fits, then stack a second one when the first cannot cover your routine.
For wider coverage of the Brazilian beauty shelf, see our best Brazilian beauty apps, best Natura alternatives, and best O Boticário alternatives guides.