WHY MEN ARE QUITTING EXPENSIVE RAZORS IN 2026
The UK’s razor market is mid-disruption. Quietly, in bathrooms across the country, men have been walking away from brands they have used for decades. Here is exactly why — and what they are doing instead.
Something is happening in British bathrooms. Not dramatically, not loudly — but consistently and at scale. Men who have bought the same brand of razors since their fathers handed one to them are quietly switching. Not because someone told them to, not because an advert convinced them, but because they did the maths, read the reviews, and asked a simple question: am I getting value for what I am paying? The answer, for hundreds of thousands of men, has been no.
This is the story of that shift — what is driving it, what men are switching to, and what the shaving industry does not want you to think too hard about. It is also, if you have not made the switch yet, the article that might tip you over.
REASON ONE: THE PRICE OF BLADES IS INDEFENSIBLE
The business model of the major razor brands is one of the most audacious in consumer goods. The handle is sold cheaply or given away. The cartridges — which cost pennies to manufacture at scale — are sold at prices that generate some of the highest margins in the personal care industry. A four-pack of cartridges from a leading brand retails at £18–22 in UK supermarkets. The manufacturing cost of those cartridges, according to independent analysis of the production economics, is estimated at £1.50–2.50 for the entire pack.
The rest — the £16–20 difference — is retail margin, brand equity, marketing spend, and the locked-in loyalty of men who have simply never questioned it. The model works brilliantly until consumers start doing the arithmetic. In 2026, they are doing the arithmetic.
UK men spend an estimated £680 million per year on razor cartridges — a figure that should be significantly lower given the actual cost of manufacturing the product. The gap between what it costs and what it sells for has been the quiet engine of the major brands’ profitability for fifty years. It is now the primary reason men are leaving.
REASON TWO: THE BLADES WERE GETTING WORSE, NOT BETTER
While prices climbed steadily year on year, multiple consumer tests and shaving community analyses noted a parallel phenomenon: the actual performance of major brand cartridges appeared to decline over the same period. Lubrication strips became shorter. Handle materials felt lighter and cheaper. Packaging shrank while prices did not. The blades themselves, according to independent sharpness testing, showed no improvement over cartridges from a decade earlier — despite years of marketing campaigns announcing revolutionary new technology.
The pattern has a name in economics: shrinkflation combined with premiumisation theatre. You charge more, deliver less, rebrand it as an upgrade, and bank on consumer inertia to absorb the difference. It worked, until it did not. The moment consumers found a genuine alternative that performed equivalently or better at a lower price, the loyalty proposition collapsed.
REASON THREE: THE SUBSCRIPTION MODEL CHANGED THE MATHS
The subscription razor model — pioneered in the US and rapidly adopted in the UK — did one thing that fundamentally disrupted the major brands’ pricing power: it removed the retailer margin from the equation. When you buy razor cartridges in a supermarket, you are paying for shelf space, retailer margin, logistics, packaging premiums, and a chunk of the manufacturer’s television advertising budget. None of those things make the blade sharper.
A direct-to-consumer subscription cuts the distribution chain dramatically. The manufacturer ships directly to your door, eliminating most of the cost stack that sits between the factory and your face. The result is a blade of equivalent or superior quality, delivered more conveniently, at a price that reflects what the product actually costs rather than what decades of brand-building have trained consumers to accept.
SmartShave’s monthly plan at £14.99 delivers fresh cartridges on your schedule. The one-off pack at £19.99 is there when you need it without a commitment. The starter kit at £9.99 is the entry point that removes the financial risk from trying something different entirely. This pricing architecture was simply not available five years ago. Now it is — and men are using it.
REASON FOUR: THE INFORMATION GAP CLOSED
The major brands’ pricing power depended partly on information asymmetry — consumers not knowing what blades actually cost to make, not knowing that alternatives existed, and not having easy access to peer comparisons. The internet ended all of that. Shaving communities on Reddit, YouTube blade review channels, and consumer comparison sites made it trivially easy to discover that the blade you had been paying £5 for was functionally equivalent to one costing £1.80 — and that the difference was entirely in the brand name on the packaging.
This is not a niche phenomenon. Google search volume for “cheap razor alternative UK” and related terms has grown consistently year on year since 2018. The consumer is educated now in a way they were not ten years ago, and educated consumers do not pay brand premiums they cannot justify on quality grounds alone.
REASON FIVE: THE ENVIRONMENTAL MATHS STOPPED ADDING UP
An estimated 300 million disposable and cartridge razors end up in UK landfill every year. For a generation of men who are increasingly conscious of their environmental footprint, the disposable razor model — buy, use briefly, discard — sits uncomfortably alongside values they hold elsewhere in their lives. The subscription model, with its longer-life precision cartridges replacing cheap frequent disposables, addresses this directly: fewer cartridges overall, used properly to their full effective life, through a delivery model with less retail packaging waste than a supermarket purchase.
This is not the primary reason most men switch. But for many it is the reason they feel good about having switched — the alignment between their consumption behaviour and their values adds a dimension of satisfaction to the decision that a supermarket cartridge purchase never provided.
WHAT MEN ARE SWITCHING TO
SmartShave sits at the intersection of the two things men switching from expensive brands care most about: price and quality. Our blades are precision-engineered with Vitamin E and Aloe Vera lubrication strips, designed to match or exceed the shave quality of major brand equivalents — at a price that does not require the consumer to subsidise fifty years of television advertising. The starter kit is £9.99. The monthly plan is £14.99. The one-off pack for when you need cartridges without a commitment is £19.99. The maths is not complicated.
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU SWITCH
The most consistent thing men report after switching from a major brand to a quality alternative is not primarily about the money — although the savings are real and noticeable. It is the mild sense of having been taken advantage of for years by a brand they trusted, combined with the equally mild pleasure of having done something about it.
The shave itself, for most men who switch to a quality subscription blade, is equivalent or better than what they were getting before. The blades are sharper because they are replaced more frequently — the economics of a subscription encourage proper blade replacement, whereas the economics of a supermarket purchase encourage stretching blades past their best to justify the high upfront cost. Fresher blades produce better shaves. Better shaves mean less irritation, fewer post-shave products needed to compensate, and fewer products bought. The savings compound in ways that are not immediately obvious but become apparent within two or three months.
The UK’s shaving market will look significantly different in five years than it does today. The brands that survive will be the ones that justify their pricing with genuine quality and genuine convenience — not with the assumption of consumer inertia that the old model relied on. The men reading this article in 2026 are the leading edge of that shift. The question is no longer whether to switch. It is what took so long.
