Skinny isn't just back on the runway—it's racing through Instagram feeds, pharmacies, and fashion houses in a way that has critics warning of a hard rewind. The Financial Times reports that after a brief push toward size inclusion, luxury fashion has swung sharply back toward ultrathin models. A Vogue Business review of 182 recent shows found nearly 98% of runway looks were worn by models in roughly the US 0 to 4 range, while chatter around increasingly "frail" celebrity bodies has intensified online. The rise of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs—including "microdosing" by already-thin women—is helping fuel what sociologist Ysabel Gerrard describes as skinniness "winning" again.
Experts say several forces are converging at once: the spread of drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy, algorithms amplifying narrow beauty ideals, backlash against "woke" body positivity, and Gen Z nostalgia for the low-rise-jeans era of the early 2000s. Social media has accelerated the shift. Although TikTok banned #skinnytok, influencers promoting tiny portions, visible collarbones, and "skinny bestie" lifestyles continue drawing huge audiences. One study cited by the FT found TikTok's algorithm pushed more dieting and toxic body-image content toward users with eating disorders than toward healthy controls.
"The skinny aesthetic never fully disappeared, even during periods when body diversity and inclusivity [from the early 2010s] were more visible in media and fashion," says Rutgers psychologist Charlotte Markey. The shift is already reshaping the fashion industry. Vogue Business found that plus-size representation on major runways fell to just 0.3% of looks for autumn/winter 2026—the lowest level since the publication began tracking inclusivity data three years ago. Plus-size models report shrinking work and disappearing "curve" sections on brand websites, with some saying they feel pressure to lose weight to stay employed.