Christina Milian is 44 years old. If you put a photo of her from 2003 next to one from last week, you would struggle to tell which was which.
Her fans have noticed.
The singer and actress shared her full skincare routine with her 7.4 million followers and the reaction was immediate.
“The ultimate forever 21-year-old,” one commenter wrote.
Another asked her to hand over “all the fountain of youth tea.”
A third was less diplomatic: “Dang girl that’s too much.”
The routine costs £609. It has 10 steps. One product alone is worth more than most people’s entire bathroom shelf.

The £251 serum doing the heavy lifting
The most expensive item in Milian’s lineup is the Dior Prestige La Micro-Huile de Rose serum at £251.
It sits alongside a Shiseido cleansing foam at £43, a Nulastin lash serum at £147 and an L’Oréal moisturiser at £31 that is doing serious work for a fraction of the price of its neighbours.

The full routine runs from cleanser to body mist, covering foam cleansers, serums, two moisturisers, a lip treatment, a lash serum, a whipped oil butter and a pair of facial ice globes that cost £6 and are arguably the best value item on the list.
Milian says the routine keeps her skin “hydrated, calm, rested and un-wrinkable.”
She also credits it with helping her recover from jet lag and maintain what she describes as “calm energy.”
The full product list

The breakdown: Day and Night lavish cleanser (£18), Shiseido Future Solution LX rich cleansing foam (£43), Dior Prestige La Micro-Huile de Rose serum (£251), L’Oréal Revitalift triple power moisturiser (£31), Philosophy Hope in a Jar moisturiser (£28), TULA Lip SOS (£24), Nulastin Lash Follicle Fortifying Serum (£147), EOS Shea Better whipped oil butter (£22), Philosophy Coconut Rush fragrance mist (£39) and facial ice globes (£6).
Fans couldn’t leave it alone

The comments section turned into a mix of awe and disbelief.
“Christina really said no wrinkles allowed,” one person wrote.

“How is your face so smooth and perfect,” asked another, dropping the question mark entirely because it wasn’t really a question. It was a complaint.
Why it matters
Celebrity skincare content is one of the most reliable engagement drivers on social media, but what makes Milian’s post land harder than most is the specificity.
She named every product and every price.
No vague references to “drinking water and getting sleep.”

No mysterious dermatologist left unnamed.
The full list is there for anyone to replicate, judge or argue about.
For beauty creators watching from the outside, this is the template that works.
Transparency about cost, specific product names, and results the audience can see with their own eyes.
The £609 total is high enough to spark debate and low enough that individual items are within reach.
That tension between aspirational and accessible is where engagement lives.

Skincare content from celebrities increasingly functions as influencer marketing whether or not any brand deal is attached.
When Milian names a £31 L’Oréal moisturiser in the same routine as a £251 Dior serum, both brands benefit. The comments do the rest.
Whether the routine is genuinely responsible for Milian looking two decades younger than her birth certificate claims is a separate question.
Her followers don’t seem particularly interested in asking it.











