Margot Robbie's beauty philosophy is conservative. She doesn't pile on actives, doesn't use serums (sensitive skin), and trusts a small, repeated stack across years of press.
She is a Chanel global ambassador since 2018, including the face of Gabrielle Chanel Essence (2019) and Chanel N°5 (2024). Where Chanel products appear in her routine, we cite the ambassador role alongside any verbatim quote.
Makeup
The Foundation
It looks like skin, but it doesn't budge. I haven't found another foundation that stays on like that without looking heavy.
Rouge Coco Flash No. 53 Chicness
I use Chanel Rouge Coco Flash No. 53 Chicness on Margot Robbie the most. It's a nude that doesn't look too dull or grey.
Chanel global ambassador since 2018. Pati Dubroff exclusively uses Chanel beauty on Margot per her Chanel contract.
Tinted Moisturiser Natural Skin Perfector
For everyday I use either Laura Mercier Tinted Moisturiser or Ellis Faas Skin Veil mixed with moisturiser.
Skincare
Beauty Elixir
I'm not a big fan of serums, as my skin can be quite sensitive, and sometimes it reacts to them, but I do love facial mists. One of my favourites is the Caudalie Beauty Elixir, which I keep in my bag at all times.
La Crème Main
My go-to hand cream is Chanel's La Crème Main — I always carry it in my handbag.
Face Care Makeup Be Gone Moisturising Wipes
My favourite makeup remover is Johnson's Face Care Makeup Be Gone Moisturising Wipes. They're cheap and they don't dry out my skin.
What is not documented
To be transparent about the limits of the public record:
- Margot's fragrance use is heavily overlaid by her Chanel ambassador role (Gabrielle Chanel Essence 2019, N°5 since 2024). Whether she personally wore Chanel fragrance pre-ambassadorship is not publicly documented — we report only the post-2018 ambassador period.
- Her foundation routine has multiple options (Suqqu, Laura Mercier, Ellis Faas) and she switches between them. We list all three with their respective quotes.
- Her skincare professionals (esthetician, facialist) are not publicly named, so we do not document in-clinic treatments.
If you have a primary source that closes any of these gaps — please email us.