Key Takeaways:Beauty & Wellbeing remains Unilever’s growth engine, up +5.1% organically, confirming the group’s pivot toward science-backed, premium personal care.Sales growth hit +3.9%, with 1.5% volume and 2.4% price, affirming Unilever’s balance between affordability and value creation amid inflationary and FX headwinds.Structural transformation accelerates as Unilever finalizes the ice cream demerger (TMICC), aiming to become a leaner, more premium-focused organization.Unilever, one of the leading corporations in the beauty, wellness and personal care space is experiencing unprecedented growth. Although it has recently sold premium brands like Kate Somerville, the company has just reported a broad-based growth in the third quarter of 2025, maintaining its trajectory toward full-year targets as it prepares to spin off its ice cream division into a standalone business it is calling The Magnum Ice Cream Company (TMICC). Despite foreign exchange headwinds that pulled total turnover down 3.5% to €14.7 billion ($17.1 billion), the consumer goods giant posted underlying sales growth (USG) of 3.9%, driven by 1.5% volume growth and 2.4% price growth.In a press release statement, CEO Fernando Fernandez described the performance as evidence of “strong innovation and brand execution,” particularly in developed markets, where Unilever saw robust demand in North America. “We’re shaping a brand portfolio that’s built for the future, with more Beauty & Wellbeing and Personal Care, prioritizing premium segments and digital commerce, and anchoring our growth in the US and India,” he said.