Lolavie Brand Review

DETAILS
When — 2025-2026
What — Hair
Brand — Lolavie
Rating — Meet

 

A Celebrity Brand Delivers

Jen’s hair really is great—and now we know it’s not just genetics. Even Brad could agree she’s built a sustainable, functional hair brand that actually checks all the boxes.

Lolavie is more than good branding and famous hair. I’ve tried a wide range of the line, and overall, I really like it. More importantly, I’ve continued to use several products from the line (that’s the real test).

The few products that didn’t work for me felt more like a mismatch for my hair than a failure on the brand’s part.

What I Expected (the promise)

I expected a polished celebrity hair brand that would make my hair look almost as good as Jennifer Aniston’s. (So basically, very high expectations.)

I expected the products to be effective, clean-ish, and especially appropriate for hair types similar to Jennifer Aniston’s. I have a lot of fine hair, so that absolutely played a role in why I wanted to try the brand in the first place.

What Happened (real life)

Overall, the brand delivered.

The shampoo, conditioner, scalp scrub, leave-in, and detangler are all on repeat for me. I have a very sensitive scalp and regularly deal with itching and flaking, so I do not keep products around just because they are pretty or popular. If something irritates my scalp, it’s out. The only item in the line that irritated my scalp was the dry shampoo. That alone gives Lolavie a lot of credibility with me.

The brand also does an excellent job with the details. The scents are good. The packaging is outstanding. The refill options back up the sustainability story.

I know they didn’t invent the Wet Brush concept, but the Lolavie version is a favorite. The Wet Brush brand usually comes in bright colors & patterns. The black-and-white design is a chic alternative.

Not everything worked for me.

The hair oil, sculpting paste, and dry shampoo were misses for my hair. They felt a little heavy, but fine hair can be annoyingly specific, and what works beautifully on someone else can easily feel too heavy on me.

I even tried the dog shampoo. It was perfectly fine, but if I’m buying fancy dog shampoo, I personally prefer the Kiehl’s scent. That is a preference, not a critique.

Lately, I’ve been air-drying with the Crown Affair Air Dry MousseROZ hair serum, and Mara body oil (yes, on my hair). I have lots of fine hair that is gray but colored so it doesn't look gray. So this is not me claiming Lolavie is the only good hair brand out there. It is me saying this one is better than most.

It does what it says it will, even without Chris McMillan on standby.

Bottom Line (who it’s for)

If you have fine hair, a sensitive scalp, or both, Lolavie is worth a try—especially the shampoo, conditioner, scalp scrub, leave-in, and detangler (links earlier in the post).

A few products didn’t work for me, but overall, this celebrity brand lives up to the hype. The few misses felt personal to my hair type, not like the brand overpromised and underdelivered.

Final Verdict: Lolavie is a MEET, delivering on its promise of being a sustainable, functional, elevated hair brand.

Not sponsored. Not gifted. Not compensated. Just my hair and my opinion.

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