Perfect Corp., the beauty technology company known for its AI-powered virtual try-on platform, is going private in a founder-led buyout. Alice H. Chang, the company’s founder and chief executive, is leading the initiative, which will take the firm off the public markets after a challenging run as a listed entity.
The beauty tech sector has seen a wave of consolidation and restructuring in 2026, as the post-pandemic surge in digital beauty engagement has normalized and investor enthusiasm has cooled. Perfect Corp.’s move mirrors similar going-private transactions in the broader enterprise software space, where founders have reclaimed control from impatient public shareholders.
The decision to go private reflects the tension between the long product-development cycles of beauty tech and the quarterly reporting demands of public markets. Perfect Corp.’s virtual try-on and skin diagnostic technologies require sustained investment in AI research and retailer integrations — investments that public market investors have been increasingly reluctant to underwrite.
Financial terms of the buyout have not been disclosed, but sources indicate the deal values the company at a discount to its SPAC-era peak, reflecting the broader recalibration of beauty tech valuations. The transaction is expected to close by the end of the third quarter, subject to shareholder approval.


