Latest in Beauty’s Travel Elite Edit packs £410 worth for £80
Latest in Beauty’s 24-piece Travel Elite Edit bundled £410 of travel-ready beauty for £80, with a £330 saving and a code that cut the price further.

Latest in Beauty’s Travel Elite Edit is the rare beauty box that makes sense as a gift because it is built for a real trip, not a fantasy shelfie. At £80, the 24-piece edit was pitched at £410 in value, promised a £330 saving, and used code TRAVEL20 for an extra discount before it sold out.
This is the box for the friend who lives out of a carry-on and still wants to land looking polished. Latest in Beauty said it packed in 24 beauty travel non-negotiables, with the edit built around high-performance SPF, skincare for flights and changing climates, hydration heroes, makeup must-haves, haircare essentials and holiday scents. That mix matters: it is not just a swollen sample set, but a travel-first edit with practical categories that actually get used between security and checkout.

The brand call list gives the box more weight than a generic mixed bundle. Beauty Detective’s spoiler list names Rodial, KSECRET SEOUL1988, PRMR, ishga, Ultra Violette, Supergoop!, Innisfree, Iconic London, Spectrum, Morphe, Laneige, grace & stella, Salt & Stone, Rose & Caramel, AKT, Lancaster, Liquid I.V., Philip Kingsley, KMS, Neal’s Yard, Juliette Has A Gun and Spotlight Oral Care. That is a strong spread of prestige skincare, functional body care and airport-friendly beauty names, which is exactly what makes the edit feel more curated than simply oversized.
Latest in Beauty has been selling one-off beauty box edits since 2008, when it was founded by Nort Janssen in London, and the format still reads as a smarter value play than chasing full-price launches one by one. The company says it works with magazines, industry leaders, beauty experts and media powerhouses, and its own homepage rates it 4.6 as “Excellent” on Trustpilot with almost 1,000 reviews. Recent customer comments also describe the Elite Box as thoughtfully curated and high value, which is reassuring when a beauty box is trying to justify a premium feel without luxury-retail pricing.

The Travel Elite Edit lands in the middle of a broader beauty-box moment, where shoppers want prestige discovery with less financial risk and more emotional justification. For the person who wants the thrill of a big beauty haul but actually travels, this one had the right brief and the right ingredients, even if the sold-out tag now makes it more of a benchmark than a buy.
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