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Next Releases New July 2026 Beauty Boxes

The only hard number on Next’s new July 2026 beauty boxes is the claimed retail value: the “Fruit Favourites” edition is valued at over £59. The missing number is the one that matters most — the selling price — so the value case cannot be audited yet.

Next Releases New July 2026 Beauty Boxes

Next’s July drop: value claim without the full ledger

Next has launched new beauty box offerings for July 2026, including a “Fruit Favourites” edition. The stated value is over £59.

That is useful, but incomplete. A retail-value figure is not the same as savings. It only becomes meaningful when matched against the box price, product sizes, and whether the items are full-size or samples. None of those details are confirmed in the available source material.

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So the current read is simple: Next has a new July beauty-box release, and at least one edition is being positioned around a value stack above £59. Until the contents and price are visible, the cost-per-item and cost-per-ounce math is unavailable. That is where filler items usually hide.

If you are considering it, check three things before buying: the actual checkout price, the item list, and whether the products are full-size. A box can clear £59 in retail value and still be weak if the value is concentrated in products you would not buy at MSRP.

Glossybox sets the July benchmark

The cleaner comparison point this week is Glossybox. Its July 2026 box launched on July 1 and is reported to include five products, with three full-size items. Brands named in the source material include Made By Mitchell, Molton Brown, and What’s In It For Me. The total stated value is over £52.

That gives buyers more to work with than the Next snippet does. Five products. Three full-sizes. A stated value above £52. Still not a complete audit, because the exact product list, sizes, and subscription cost are not fully detailed in the evidence here. But the structure is clearer.

For comparison purposes, Next’s “Fruit Favourites” edition has the higher stated value on paper: over £59 versus Glossybox’s over £52. That does not make it the better buy. A £7 difference in claimed value can disappear fast if one box relies on minis, niche shades, or inflated MSRP. Full-size count matters. Usable categories matter. Repeat-product risk matters.

The No7 signal: limited edition, limited data

Woman & Home also reports a new limited-edition No7 beauty box. The source frames it positively, but the available evidence does not give a price, value, item count, or contents.

That makes it impossible to rank against Next or Glossybox on numbers. No7 boxes can be appealing to buyers who already use the brand, but that is a preference call, not a value calculation. Without contents, there is no way to separate a strong curated set from a branded clearance bundle.

The practical move is to wait for the itemized contents. If the No7 box includes core-use products in saleable sizes, it may compete well. If it is padded with small-format extras, the “limited-edition” label does not add value. Scarcity is not a discount.

Verdict: wait for the price, then do the math

Next’s July 2026 beauty-box release is worth tracking, especially the “Fruit Favourites” edition with a stated value over £59. But the buy case is not proven.

Glossybox currently gives the more auditable July snapshot: five products, three full-sizes, value over £52. Next has the higher stated value, but not enough disclosed structure. No7 is the least measurable of the three based on current information.

Verdict: wait. Do not buy the Next box on the £59-plus value claim alone. Buy only if the final price, item count, and product sizes produce a real discount on products you would actually use.