Queen Camilla Got Her Eyebrows Tattooed for $1,870 and It Shows2 min read

The Brows That Launched a Thousand Zoomed-In Photos
She is 78, Queen of England, and apparently not done experimenting. Queen Camilla recently showed up to a major state event with noticeably darker, sharper brows — and the beauty world didn’t let it pass quietly. The reason is exactly what it looks like. She got them tattooed.
The treatment is called the “Couture Brow.” It costs $1,870, it comes from a London specialist named Suzanne Martin, and its client list reads like a festival headliner lineup: Dua Lipa, Ellie Goulding, and now the Queen herself.
The Woman Behind the Needle
Martin works out of The Lanesborough Club & Spa in London — the kind of address that doesn’t need a billboard. Her reputation does the advertising. The premise of her practice is simple: brows that look like yours, only more so. Not drawn on. Not theatrical. Better.
After Camilla’s appointment, Martin confirmed everything herself on social media. “Our beloved Queen Camilla, always a pleasure! Thank you for trusting me,” she wrote. Short, warm, utterly professional. The post sent beauty editors into a full sprint.
What Actually Happens in the Chair
The word “tattooing” sounds severe. The process isn’t. Martin uses a fine tattoo pen to stroke individual hair lines directly onto the skin, one at a time, working from a color match done during a lengthy pre-treatment consultation. The pigment sits just below the skin’s top layer — precise enough to hold, shallow enough to fade gracefully.
The full treatment spans two sessions, each running 90 minutes. A refresh is recommended every eight to ten months at $1,070 per visit. That’s the ongoing cost of brows that survive rain, sleep, and state dinners without ever asking anything of you.
“When designed with intention, the perfect brow lifts, balances, and reveals the natural beauty of the eyes, enhancing what is there, rather than masking it.” — Suzanne Martin
Bold First, Perfect Later
Fresh tattooed brows always land dark. That’s how the pigment works: intense at the surface, then it softens as the skin heals and the color settles into its final shade. What looks stark at the clinic becomes exactly right a few weeks out.
Camilla’s brows were front and center during the Nigerian state visit this week — the first inbound state visit to the UK of 2026. Cameras did what cameras do. Beauty accounts followed. Then Martin’s post confirmed the speculation and the story took off. “The treatment is not at all uncomfortable,” Martin told Hello!. “The results are always perfectly natural.”