0.25 CIP Points
Looksmaxxing and peptides: When online culture becomes an insurance risk
By Anna Lopata - ANZIIF Senior writer Social media trends increasingly shape real-world behaviour, creating risks that extend beyond screens. The rise of looksmaxxing and injectable peptides highlights emerging exposures across health, liability, regulation and mental wellbeing. A generation ago,...
15 Jun 2026
3 mins read

Summary
- Looksmaxxing has evolved beyond grooming and fitness, with some young men turning to injectable peptides and other appearance-enhancing interventions promoted through social media.
- Health experts and regulators are concerned about unapproved peptide products, warning of risks including contamination, incorrect dosing, adverse reactions and a lack of long-term safety evidence.
- The trend is creating potential insurance exposures across product liability, professional indemnity, medical malpractice, directors’ and officers’ liability and emerging forms of digital liability.
- Male body image pressures are increasing, challenging assumptions that appearance anxiety primarily affects young women and raising concerns about mental health and wellbeing impacts.
- For insurers, the bigger story is how online culture creates new categories of risk, with social media increasingly influencing health decisions, consumer behaviour and future claims trends.
By Anna Lopata – ANZIIF Senior writer
Social media trends increasingly shape real-world behaviour, creating risks that extend beyond screens. The rise of looksmaxxing and injectable peptides highlights emerging exposures across health, liability, regulation and mental wellbeing.
A generation ago, concerns about body image were largely associated with teenage girls.
Today, a rapidly growing online movement known as “looksmaxxing” is exposing young men to similar pressures; and in some cases encouraging them to experiment with unregulated injectable substances promoted through social media.
0 Comments