K-Beauty & Fashion,  Food & Lifestyle

2026 AI Makeup at a Korean Convenience Store

Korean convenience stores have always been a step ahead — hot meals, phone charging, delivery pickup, even laundry. But now CU, one of Korea’s largest chains, is adding something new to the list: customized AI makeup.

Interior of a CU convenience store in Seoul featuring a "Beauty" section with Glow-Up Station skincare products, a NAMANE kiosk, and a "Purple Cube" K-Pop merchandise display with neon signage. Text reads "A convenience store that does your makeup. CU · Seoul." Photo by @reputis.mag.
AI Makeup

On March 26, 2026, CU officially launched its “Makeup Palette Maker” — an AI-powered kiosk that diagnoses your personal color and creates a custom eyeshadow palette on the spot. It’s the first service of its kind in Korea’s convenience store industry.

We visited one of the launch locations in Seoul to see how it works.


How AI makeup Works

The process is surprisingly simple. You step up to the kiosk, scan your face, and the AI analyzes your skin tone to determine your personal color type. It then recommends shades that suit you — but you’re not locked in. You can choose from over 100 colors, mixing matte and glitter finishes to build a 4-shade palette exactly how you want it.

Close-up of CU's Beauty Play Zone showing an AI Makeup Palette Maker kiosk, EZ-Tattoo station, and Glow-Up Station with skincare products. Text reads "AI Makeup Palette Maker. Scan. Match. Make. 100+ shades. Custom palette. 5,000 won. Ready in minutes." Photo by @reputis.mag.
AI Makeup

You can even preview the colors on your face in real time through the screen before committing. Once you’re done, the machine assembles your palette and hands it to you — the whole process takes just a few minutes.

The palette costs 5,000 won (roughly $3.50), and CU is running a launch promotion at 3,500 won. It’s a small, travel-friendly size designed for about 4 to 5 uses — ideal for testing new colors without committing to a full-size product.

All ingredients are certified by Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, and the palette can be used as eyeshadow, blush, or brow color.


More Than Just Makeup

The AI kiosk is just one part of CU’s new “Beauty Play Zone” concept. The stores we visited also featured a Glow-Up Station stocked with skincare essentials — sheet masks, sunscreen, cleansers — positioned for quick grab-and-go beauty shopping.

There’s also an EZ-Tattoo station where you can print a temporary tattoo directly onto your skin using a Prinker device. Pick a design, press, and you’re done.

And then there’s the Purple Cube — CU’s dedicated K-Pop merchandise zone. Albums, photo cards, and collectibles from artists under the STAN platform sit alongside beauty products, creating a unique crossover between K-Pop fandom and K-Beauty culture.

Purple Cube K-Pop merchandise zone inside CU convenience store with K-Pop albums and photo cards on display under neon signage. Text reads "K-Pop merch. Skincare. One store." Photo by @reputis.mag.

Why AI makeup Matters

This isn’t just a gimmick. It’s part of a broader strategy by CU (operated by BGF Retail) to transform the convenience store from a place you grab a drink into a lifestyle platform.

CU has been segmenting its stores by neighborhood demographics — placing capsule toy machines near schools, fruit kiosks in office districts, and now beauty services in areas with high traffic from young women and international tourists. The AI makeup kiosk launched at two Seoul locations (Hotel PJ in Jung-gu and Yeonnam Azit in Mapo-gu) and will expand to stores near Daechi-dong academies in April. The goal is 100+ locations by the end of 2026.

Korea’s convenience store beauty market has been growing steadily — CU’s cosmetics sales rose 21.4% year-over-year in 2025, with roughly 70% of purchases coming from customers in their teens and twenties. With over 1,000 beauty-specialized stores already in operation, the addition of AI-powered services signals where the industry is heading.


The Korean Convenience Store Is Evolving

 Exterior banner of CU's Beauty Play Zone advertising AI Makeup & Tattoo Station services with pricing information. Text reads "The Korean convenience store is evolving. Save this. Follow @reputis.mag." Photo by @reputis.mag.
AI Makeup

What makes this interesting isn’t just the technology — it’s the context. In Korea, the convenience store is already a cultural institution. It’s where you eat, pay bills, print documents, and now, apparently, get your makeup done by AI.

If you’re visiting Seoul, keep an eye out for CU stores with the Beauty Play Zone signage. And if you’re interested in how Korean beauty culture keeps reinventing itself, follow @reputis.mag for more stories like this.


Sources

  • BGF Retail official announcement, March 26, 2026

All photos by @reputis.mag. Article information sourced from the publications listed above. No press images or third-party photos were used.

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