Comparison

Beauty Report vs Skincare Glow: full face or skin only

Both readings work from a selfie and focus on the face. Beauty Report writes an editorial assessment across six sub-areas with grooming and styling notes. Skincare Glow reads your skin in four facial zones and recommends an AM and PM skincare routine framework. Different focus, different recommendation surface, often run together for a complete face read.

Left

Beauty Report

An honest, single-photo beauty assessment

Try Beauty Report
Right

Skincare Glow

A cosmetic skin-zone routine card from a bare-face selfie

Try Skincare Glow

Short verdict

Start with Beauty Report if you want the broader read: bone structure, symmetry, proportions, eye area, smile, and grooming. Start with Skincare Glow if your question is specifically about your skin: oil, dryness, texture, breakouts, and which products to use. Many users run Beauty Report first then Skincare Glow as a focused follow-up on the skin sub-area.

Different scope

Beauty Report is a broad face assessment. It scores six sub-areas independently (symmetry, proportions, bone structure, skin, eye area, smile) and writes editorial notes on each. Skin is one of the six, but it shares billing with five other facial features. The output is a complete face read.

Skincare Glow is a focused skin read. It divides the face into four zones (T-zone, cheeks, under-eye, jawline) and reads each independently for oil production, hydration, texture, pigmentation, fatigue, and breakouts. The output is a luxe beauty card with zone-by-zone observations plus a complete AM and PM routine framework.

Different action surface

Beauty Report's grooming-and-styling notes are general: brows, hair, beard, lipstick undertone, glasses frame. The skin notes are limited to the editorial-style observations (visible glow, skin smoothness, photo-readiness) rather than a specific skincare regimen.

Skincare Glow recommends category-level products in an AM and PM routine: gentle cleanser, antioxidant serum, moisturiser, SPF in the morning; double cleanse, active treatment, moisturiser at night. It does not recommend specific brands; the framework lets you shop your preferred line.

Which to start with

If your question is about your face overall, Beauty Report. If your question is specifically about your skin, Skincare Glow. The two pair well: Beauty Report flags skin as one of six areas; Skincare Glow then drills into the skin layer with a complete routine framework.

Note: Skincare Glow is cosmetic guidance only, not medical advice. For active acne that scars, sudden changes, or any persistent skin condition, see a dermatologist. The reading is framed as a save-and-share keepsake that points you toward useful categories of products, not as a prescription.

When to pick which

Common questions

What's the difference between Beauty Report and Skincare Glow?
Beauty Report assesses the whole face across six sub-areas. Skincare Glow drills specifically into the skin with a four-zone read and an AM and PM routine framework. Different scope.
Is Skincare Glow medical advice?
No. Skincare Glow is cosmetic guidance only. For any specific skin concern, see a dermatologist.
Can I do both for one fee?
No, each reading is its own $4.99 purchase. The two are genuinely different deliverables.

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