Ranked Index

The table below ranks haircare investments brands by a composite of reported revenue, equity quality, and exit / valuation precedent. Where revenue is undisclosed, we use trade-press estimates and mark them accordingly. The ranking is intended to be useful to investors and founders comparing comparable brands; it is not an investment recommendation.
| # | Brand | Celebrity / Founder | Reported Value or Revenue | Founded / Deal Year | Structure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cécred | Beyoncé | Reported $200M+ run-rate | 2024 | Founder majority |
| 2 | Pattern Beauty | Tracee Ellis Ross | Reported $100M+ GMV | 2019 | Founder majority |
| 3 | OUAI (founder-led, celeb adj.) | Jen Atkin | $200M+ exit (Procter & Gamble route) | 2016 | Strategic acquisition |
| 4 | Mielle Organics | Monique Rodriguez | $1B+ acquisition by P&G | 2023 | Strategic acquisition |
| 5 | EFAÎ by Eva Longoria | Eva Longoria | Founder controlled | 2024 | Founder majority |
| 6 | R+Co (celeb stylist) | Industry collective | Acquired by L Catterton | 2019 | PE acquisition |
| 7 | Briogeo | Nancy Twine + celeb backers | Acquired by Wella | 2022 | Strategic acquisition |
| 8 | Adwoa Beauty | Julian Addo | Founder controlled | 2017 | Founder majority |
| 9 | TPH by Taraji | Taraji P. Henson | Reported high-8-fig GMV | 2020 | Founder majority |
| 10 | Eva NYC (celeb-adj.) | Industry founders | Acquired by AS Beauty | 2017 | Strategic acquisition |
Three sets of inputs went into this list. First, public valuations and exit prices where they exist. Second, trade-press revenue estimates from Bloomberg, WWD, BoF, Forbes, and category-trade publications. Third, structural scoring on equity quality — the founder's control position, the IP package, the cap-table cleanliness, and the route to exit.
A brand with a $500M reported run-rate but a messy cap table and unassigned IP can rank lower than a $200M brand with founder-majority control and clean IP. The structural dimension is the one most haircare investments ranking lists ignore — and the dimension most predictive of long-term value creation.
Several brands sit just outside the ranked list above and are likely to enter it within 18 months. The watch list includes founder-majority brands that have not yet disclosed a Series A round and creator-led brands that have crossed $50M in run-rate but not yet completed a strategic conversation. We update this watch list quarterly.
Investors covering the haircare investments category in 2026 should focus on three signals. First, the strategic acquirer pipeline — which CPG strategics are signaling appetite for celebrity-founded acquisitions in their public investor communications. Second, the founder-team retention rate post-Series A — brands where founders stay through Series B carry materially higher exit multiples. Third, the international rollout pacing — brands that crack one international market in year three tend to crack three more in years four and five.
Each of these signals can be tracked from public filings, investor calls, and trade-press disclosures. The signal-to-noise ratio is highest in strategic-acquirer commentary on celebrity brand strategy in earnings calls.
Looking at the top five brands on this haircare investments list, four common structural threads emerge. Each top-five brand had a clear category-leadership thesis from launch — not a generalist beauty/wellness/fashion play. Each had a tight SKU edit at first launch (4-12 SKUs, not 30+). Each had founder-aligned operating leadership in place by year two. And each had a defined route to a strategic conversation by year three, even if no transaction occurred.
The fifth thread, harder to operationalize, is that each top-five brand had a creative voice that was unmistakably the founder's — readable on the package, in the marketing, and in every public-facing statement. Brands where the celebrity is interchangeable with their endorsement deals do not make this list.
Three forces are likely to reshape the haircare investments list in 2027. The first is the next wave of strategic CPG M&A — Procter & Gamble, Unilever, L'Oréal, and Estée Lauder are each signaling renewed appetite for founder-led acquisitions, which would compress the gap between the founder-majority and acquired tiers. The second is the LatAm celebrity beauty wave, with Karol G, Tini Stoessel, and Anitta in the early conversations on category entry. The third is the K-beauty / celebrity intersection, where for the first time, equity-led K-beauty brands with celebrity founders are technically possible at the supply-chain level.
Three caveats apply to this ranking. First, several brands listed are private and the revenue figures are estimates from trade press, not company filings. Second, the structural-quality grading reflects our view of the cap-table and IP package as of the publication date; private deals can restructure quickly. Third, this is not investment advice — investors should conduct their own diligence before relying on any number here.