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Ends: 26th Jun 2025
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Progress in the world of personal grooming tends to follow a curious trajectory: first something is made for men, then slowly - grudgingly - it’s tweaked, rewrapped in pastel, and offered to women at a slight markup. Every so often, a brand tries to upend this unspoken system. FFS Beauty,…Progress in the world of personal grooming tends to follow a curious trajectory: first something is made for men, then…
Ends: 26th Jun 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 26th Jun 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Progress in the world of personal grooming tends to follow a curious trajectory: first something is made for men, then slowly - grudgingly - it’s tweaked, rewrapped in pastel, and offered to women at a slight markup. Every so often, a brand tries to upend this unspoken system. FFS Beauty, a UK-born razor and skincare subscription brand, is one of those. The name (it stands for "Fuss Free Shaving") walks that fine line between tongue-in-cheek and brandable. Their pitch? A sterilised, streamlined way to get high-quality razors delivered to your door, with none of the usual pink tax, and ideally, none of the usual skin irritation either.
It’s a claim that’s refreshingly grounded - as far as direct-to-consumer beauty brands go. You won’t find euphoric hyperbole or promises of spiritual transformation. Just blades, handles, creams, and a subscription service that doesn’t make you feel like you accidentally joined a cult.
The core product is a five-blade razor that comes in multiple colours (rose gold, silver, coral) with a solid metal handle. It's surprisingly weighty - which is either a sign of quality or a mildly alarming hint that you’ve picked up the kitchen peeler by mistake. It performs well, giving a closer shave than the mid-tier disposable razors you might pick up at the supermarket. Credit where it’s due: it’s genuinely well-designed for smaller hands and less angular body terrain. The blades glide smoothly, and they’re easy to replace without requiring a PhD in Applied Engineering.
The starter kit is currently offered at £9.95, which includes a metal razor handle, two blade heads, a protective cover, and a suction holder that - if we're being honest - does its job, unless you like steaming hot showers and vertical tiles. Standard shipping is free in the UK, with deliveries usually arriving within 3–5 working days. You can skip, cancel or adapt your refill schedule via your online account, which is easier than cancelling most gym memberships, and commendably free of guilt-tripping messages.
Unlike many subscription services engineered to quietly bleed your PayPal dry over the years, FFS largely leaves you alone. You choose how often you want blade refills (every 2, 3 or 4 months), and they show up in recyclable cardboard packaging. They even offer a blade recycling scheme - an unexpectedly thoughtful feature for something you usually toss in the bin while half-asleep at 7 a.m.
The blades are surprisingly durable and feature a lubricating strip infused with vitamin E and aloe. This doesn’t revolutionise the shaving experience, but it does make it a bit less like dragging a cheese grater across your leg. Some users report a noticeable reduction in post-shave irritation, though realistically, your water temperature and shaving cream technique probably play just as much of a role.
If you’re fanatically loyal to your Venus or Bic razors, FFS won’t turn your world upside down. But for what it’s offering - a subscription-based shaving kit that arrives on time, isn’t appallingly expensive, and doesn’t look like it was designed by someone with a glitter addiction - it’s solid. The price per razor refill comes down to around £2–£2.50 depending on your subscription interval and how often you miss emails.
The accompanying shaving cream and exfoliating products aren’t bad, though they’re arguably more filler than killer. They smell pleasant (light, soapy, unintrusive) and serve their purpose, but won't make you abandon your existing skincare regime. One notable weak point flagged by more than one customer is the company’s switch from tubes to pump bottles - for some, a downgrade in practicality and eco-friendliness masquerading as progress.
Also worth a mention: the brand calls itself "cruelty-free," and most of its packaging is recyclable. Whether that tilts the ethical scale for you will probably depend on whether you also sort your waste by colour or drink barista oat milk out of principle.
If you’re tired of nabbing razors during the weekly shop and forgetting refills until it’s too late, FFS Beauty’s subscription makes life mildly easier - a quiet convenience, not a lifestyle revolution. There’s a subtle elegance to paying £9.95 for a trial kit that likely outperforms what you’re already using from the chemist, and a general lack of unnecessary features is perhaps its best feature.
For those interested, there’s currently a discount of up to 30% off via subscribing, and a rewards system earns you small perks for referring friends. Refunds are available within 14 days (unused products only), and there’s no lock-in period for the subscription. So you can exit gracefully, unlike your mobile contract or your last attempt at a sourdough starter.
Overall, FFS Beauty is neither revolutionary nor rickety. It simply does what it says on the refillable tin: provide good-enough razors, at decent-enough prices, with minimal faff. And in a market drowning in glow-up promises and ceramic shelfie aesthetics, that’s oddly refreshing.
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⭐ Rating: 3.9 / 5 (10 votes)