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The Top 6 Makeup Brushes Actually Worth Owning

You do not need a 24-piece set. You need a handful of brushes that do their jobs brilliantly. These are the six we would buy again.

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Walk into any beauty hall and you will be sold the fantasy of the giant brush set: two dozen handles in a zip-up roll, most of which will never once touch your face. The truth, which no one selling the set particularly wants to say out loud, is that a well-chosen handful of brushes will outperform a bloated collection every single time, and will cost you a great deal less in the process. A good tool does not just apply product; it changes the finish entirely, softening harsh edges, diffusing colour, blending away tide lines and turning a passable, patchy base into a properly polished and even one.

What separates a brush genuinely worth owning from expensive filler comes down to a few unglamorous things: the quality and density of the bristles, whether they hold their shape after repeated washing, how well they pick up and release product without shedding hairs onto your cheek, and whether the shape actually suits its intended job. Synthetic bristles have improved enormously in recent years and now handle both cream and powder beautifully, which also makes them the kinder, more practical and more hygienic choice. Price, encouragingly, is not the whole story here at all, and some of the very best performers cost surprisingly little.

So we built the set we would actually reach for, one brush per essential job, rather than a cluttered drawer of near-duplicates that all do roughly the same thing. Each was tested over several weeks of real daily use and real washing, because a brush that sheds hairs onto a finished cheek or splays out of shape after a month is no bargain at any price, however tempting the initial sticker. For more on the techniques these tools unlock, from a diffused base to a soft eye, our beauty desk goes further. Here are the six that earn their place, and would earn it again if we were starting a kit from scratch tomorrow.

1. Sigma F80 Flat Kabuki Brush

The foundation brush that makes liquid base look genuinely airbrushed. Its dense, flat-top synthetic bristles buff product into the skin for a seamless, streak-free finish. Over several weeks of near-daily use and regular washing it held its shape and barely shed a single hair.

Why it made the six: The gold-standard buffing brush for a flawless liquid or cream base, and remarkably durable for the price.

Price: around $25.

2. Real Techniques Miracle Complexion Sponge

Not a brush, but the complexion tool no kit should be without, so it comfortably earns its place here. Damp, it presses and bounces foundation into a natural, skin-like finish and reaches into corners a brush simply cannot. It is also astonishing value for how much work it does.

Why it made the six: The best-value complexion tool for a dewy, second-skin base, and endlessly versatile.

Price: around $6.

3. MAC 217S Blending Brush

The eyeshadow brush professionals reach for by instinct, and for many people the only eye brush they truly need to own. Its soft, tapered bristles blend and diffuse shadow into a seamless gradient with almost no effort. Over several weeks it proved the reliable workhorse of the entire eye look.

Why it made the six: The definitive all-purpose blending brush, capable of carrying most of an eye look entirely on its own.

Price: around $30.

4. Fenty Beauty Cheek-Hugging Highlight Brush

The cheekbone specialist of the group. Its angled, tapered head fits the natural contour of the cheek to place highlighter or blush exactly where the light should catch it. It made precise, professional-looking placement genuinely easy, even for the unpractised.

Why it made the six: The most precise brush here for highlight and blush placement, with a clever, purpose-built shape.

Price: around $28.

5. e.l.f. Ultimate Blending Brush

Proof that a great fluffy powder brush need not cost much at all. Its soft, full bristles are ideal for diffusing powder, setting the face or applying bronzer with a light, even and forgiving hand. Over several weeks it washed well and kept its full shape without splaying.

Why it made the six: An excellent, genuinely soft powder brush at a near-throwaway price.

Price: around $6.

6. Morphe M439 Deluxe Buffer Brush

The bronzer-and-blush all-rounder. A dense, dome-shaped brush that buffs powder blush, bronzer or setting powder into the skin without leaving any harsh edges behind. It quickly became the brush we grabbed by default for warming up the whole face at once.

Why it made the six: A versatile, well-priced buffer that softens powder products beautifully across the face.

Price: around $16.

The Sixated take

If you own just these six, you can create almost any everyday look without a drawer full of duplicates gathering dust. The Sigma F80 and the Real Techniques sponge cover your base from two genuinely useful angles; the MAC 217S handles the eyes; and the Fenty, e.l.f. and Morphe brushes take care of cheeks, setting and bronzing between them. The reassuring headline is that a great kit is not fundamentally a matter of budget: two of our six cost around $6, and they hold their own comfortably against far pricier handles. Whatever you buy, wash your brushes regularly, at least weekly for anything that touches base or cream, reshape them while damp and let them dry flat. Cared for properly, good brushes last years, which makes even the pricier picks here quietly economical. For the application techniques that make the most of them, our beauty section has more.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many makeup brushes do I actually need?

Far fewer than the big sets suggest. A base brush or sponge, a blending brush for eyes, and a fluffy brush for powder and cheeks will cover most everyday looks. Add a precise cheek brush and you are well equipped. Quality and the right shapes matter more than quantity.

Are synthetic or natural-hair brushes better?

Synthetic brushes have improved enormously and now handle both cream and powder products well. They are also easier to clean, more durable, and the practical, animal-free choice. Most of the brushes we recommend are synthetic for exactly these reasons.

How often should I wash my makeup brushes?

Wash anything that touches foundation, concealer or cream products at least weekly to keep them hygienic and performing well. Powder brushes can be washed a little less often. Reshape them while damp and dry them flat rather than upright.

Do expensive brushes really perform better?

Not necessarily. Some of the best performers are inexpensive, and two of our six cost around $6. Price can reflect craftsmanship and durability, but a well-designed budget brush often rivals far pricier ones. Judge by bristle quality and shape, not the price tag.

Camille Rousseau
Beauty Editor

Camille Rousseau

Camille Rousseau leads beauty at Sixated, from skincare and makeup to fragrance and tools. She tests products over weeks before recommending them, and discloses when something arrived as a PR sample.

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