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Bebot Trend: Global Influencers Are Obsessed With This Bold Filipina Look
Lifestyle

Bebot Trend: Global Influencers Are Obsessed With This Bold Filipina Look

Written by:
TheExpatStory
Last updated: February 24, 2026
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The Bebot makeup trend is taking over TikTok and Instagram, with global creators obsessing over this bold, early-2000s Filipina look rooted in cultural pride.

If your TikTok or Instagram feed has recently been taken over by smoky eyes, pencil-thin brows, glossy lips, and dramatic beat-drop transformations, you are not alone. The Bebot makeup trend has officially taken the internet by storm, and creators from every corner of the world are lining up to try it. Trust me, this is not just another fleeting beauty moment. It is a full cultural reset, and it is coming straight out of the Philippines.

The word “bebot” is Filipino slang that dates back to the 1980s. It loosely translates to “babe,” “pretty woman,” or in Gen Z terms, “baddie.” The term went global through the Black Eyed Peas song “Bebot,” released on their 2005 album Monkey Business. Written and performed by Filipino-American member apl.de.ap entirely in Filipino, the track is a love letter to his heritage and his roots in Pampanga, Philippines.

Watch the video below:

@blackeyedpeas

It all started here… in 2005🔥

♬ son original – Black Eyed Peas Updates

The music video, set at a Filipino-American party, featured women in peak early-2000s glam: glossy lips, smoky eyes, thin brows, bronzed skin, and the kind of unapologetic confidence that makes you want to recreate the whole look immediately. Fast forward twenty years, and that exact aesthetic is what the internet cannot stop talking about.

The trend was sparked by Filipina creator Belle Pauleen (@bellepauleen) in December 2025, with a TikTok captioned simply: “Bebot is just Filipina baddie but in Tagalog.”

@bellepauleen my jam 🙂‍↕️ #foryou #fypシ #filo #makeuptutorial #abg ♬ Original Sound – Unknown

The format is the classic beat-drop transformation: bare face, then the music kicks in, and suddenly she is serving full early-2000s Filipina glam. Creator Monique Libres (@monique_libres) then took it a step further with what she called the “historically accurate bebot,” sticking closely to the exact aesthetic from the original music video, thin brows, pompadour, hoop earrings, bronzed base, the works. That version became the template everyone else riffed on. By early February 2026, the whole thing had exploded into a full-blown international moment, with videos racking up millions of views across TikTok and Instagram Reels.

What makes this trend different from your average viral makeup challenge is the emotional weight behind it. For many Filipinas, this is not just about a fun transformation video. Many users noted that for the first time, the validation of Filipina beauty is coming from Filipinas themselves rather than from outside. That hits differently.

@cindychendesigns Comment if you have multiple accents too!! Bebot trend but with my Valentine’s Day/Chinese New Year weekend outfit and showing my OG accent for the first time 👀 where are my beautiful pinoys at?! ❤️ Ib: @Jyn_ea #makeuptransition #creativemakeup #makeupart #creativemakeup #behindthescenes ♬ original sound – Cindy Chen Designs

How to Create a Bebot Makeup Look Step by Step

The Bebot look is all about drama and definition, and it is the perfect antidote to the barely-there clean girl aesthetic that has dominated feeds for years. Here is how to nail it.

Start with the eyes. Think cool-toned gray and silver eyeshadow blended across the lid with a heavily smoked-out black liner on both the upper and lower lash line. The shadow should be visible and defined, not blended into oblivion. This is the detail that instantly screams early 2000s and sets the whole look apart.

Next, the brows. Slim, sharp, and lightly penciled in. Not the fluffy, brushed-up brows of today. Keep the arch crisp and the edges clean. A touch of highlighter under the brow bone adds that lifted, frosty Y2K finish that is very much part of the aesthetic.

For the base, go matte and powder-set. Keep blush minimal and lean into a warm bronzed finish. The Bebot look celebrates morena skin rather than covering it, so a bronzed, sculpted base is the goal. Finish with a glossy lip in a sheer pink or nude tone with a visible lip liner for that signature early-2000s shine. Style with hoop earrings, a hair pouf or mini pompadour, and oversized shades, and you are officially a bebot.

Global Influencers Trying the Bebot Makeup Trend

Here is where things get really exciting. What started as a celebration of Filipina beauty has completely crossed over, with creators from different countries, backgrounds, and aesthetics all jumping on the trend and making it their own. Even creators who had never heard of the Philippines before this trend are now deep in a rabbit hole of Bebot tutorials, serving their own version of the look for their audiences.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Alxandra (@alxandra)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Mina (@minaamouse016)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Ling.KT (@ling.kt)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Marjan Tabibzada (@youngcouture_)

Gotta say one thing, the Bebot look on South Asian features is something else entirely and we are obsessed!

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Fiza Manchanda (@fiza.manchandaa)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Hina♡ (@lifeof.hina)

Even our beautiful hijabi influencers had a stunning take on the #bebottrend

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Ishani Mitra (@ishanimitraa)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by frishta ghaderi (@frishtag_)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by khadijah (@khadii.pdf)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by sadia MoArmy (@sadia_akter53)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Makeup n henna by aishhrahim (@aishhrahim)

Remember the wannabe HR we all have a love-hate relationship with? Yes, even @thesarcastictrash tried the look!

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Mayank Tiwari (@thatsarcastictrash)

Back on home turf, Filipino actress Sue Ramirez was one of the first local celebrities to post her transformation, pairing her Bebot look with a red dress and immediately setting a very high bar. Actress Gabbi Garcia followed shortly after. Creator Lierge Perey (@pereylierge) earned massive praise for her take, and Belle Rodolfo (@bellerodolfo) went the extra mile with a full tutorial covering both the makeup and the signature Bebot hairstyle. Creator Zeinab Harake-Parks posted her version from Dubai, introducing the trend to Middle Eastern and South Asian feeds and pulling in an entirely new audience.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Kristina Rodulfo (@kristinarodulfo)

Belle Pauleen, the creator who started it all, told the Daily Dot: “Watching the trend evolve has been incredibly fulfilling, because for the first time, it feels like Filipinas have something we can confidently call our own. This trend has opened a space for confidence and self-definition to exist loudly and unapologetically.”

The hashtags #bebot and #bebotmakeup continue to grow every single day. Cosmetics brands are already taking note, with several reportedly developing palettes inspired by the look. Whether you are Filipina or simply a lover of bold, unapologetic makeup, the Bebot trend is one you absolutely need on your feed right now.

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