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TikTok bio ideas

Makeup TikTok bio ideas

A strong makeup bio does one job: it tells a stranger, in under two seconds, which kind of makeup you teach and why your version is worth watching. The makeup niche on TikTok is enormous, so 'makeup lover' or 'MUA' disappears into the feed. The bios that convert name a lane — hooded eyes, deep skin tones, drugstore dupes, mature skin, bridal — and pair it with a payoff the viewer can picture. Someone who just watched your eyeliner video decides in one glance whether to follow, and your bio is the closer. It should confirm you make more of what they liked, hint at your skill level or credential so they know to trust you, and drop the vague adjectives. Save the search-friendly keyword (the technique, product type, or skin concern) for the front. Then, if you post on a schedule, say so — a promise of 'new look every Tuesday' turns a one-time viewer into a subscriber.

Makeup bios to copy

  • Drugstore glam that actually lasts. New look every Tuesday.
  • Teaching you eyeliner that doesn't smudge by noon.
  • Mature skin makeup for women who skipped the trend cycle.
  • Full beat on a $20 budget. Proof in every video.
  • Hooded eyes finally get a fair shot. Tutorials daily.
  • Bridal makeup artist sharing pro tips you can steal.
  • Acne-safe makeup that photographs clean. No filters.
  • 5-minute faces for people who hit snooze twice.
  • Color theory for makeup, minus the art degree.
  • Testing viral products so you don't waste the cash.
  • Glam grandma proving 60 is a whole vibe.
  • Special FX and gore, healed by morning.
  • Deep skin tones, shade matches that finally work.
  • Editorial looks broken down for real Tuesdays.
  • Melasma-friendly routines that stay put in humidity.
  • Licensed MUA. Ask me anything in the comments.
  • Soft glam for guys who want to look like themselves.
  • One palette, thirty looks. Watch me prove it.
  • Beginner brushes to first full face in 30 days.
  • Makeup for glasses wearers who are tired of guessing.

Writing a makeup bio that converts

  • Name your exact lane in the first line. 'Makeup' is a category; 'hooded-eye tutorials for beginners' is a reason to follow. Specific beats broad every time.
  • Put your skill level or credential up front. Whether you're a licensed MUA or self-taught, people follow the promise they can actually trust.
  • Swap generic words for a concrete payoff. 'Tips and tricks' says nothing; 'eyeliner that survives a 12-hour shift' sells the click instantly.
  • Add a posting rhythm if you keep one. 'New look every Tuesday' tells people what following you actually gets them, and it brings them back.

A great bio turns viewers into followers

Nail the bio, then nail the videos — ReelTok's AI scores your makeup posts and writes hooks before you share. Free 3-day trial on iPhone.

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Frequently asked questions

What should I put in my TikTok makeup bio?

Name your makeup lane (hooded eyes, deep skin tones, drugstore, bridal), the payoff a viewer gets, and your skill level or credential if you have one. Skip vague words like 'MUA' or 'obsessed' and lead with the specific technique or concern people search for.

How long should a makeup bio be?

Keep it under about 80 characters so it reads in one glance. TikTok truncates long bios, and the real hook — your niche plus the reason to follow — should land before anyone taps 'more.'

Should I say I'm not a professional makeup artist?

Yes, if it fits your angle. 'Self-taught' or 'beginner' is a selling point for viewers at the same level, and it sets honest expectations. Just pair it with a clear payoff so people still know why to follow.


Keep going: Makeup hooks, Makeup captions, or all bio ideas by niche.