Social media has transformed the beauty industry into a fast-moving carousel of viral hacks, miracle ingredients and overnight transformations. One week, everyone is coating their faces in beef tallow. The next, they’re layering six different exfoliating acids or freezing their skin with ice baths in pursuit of a flawless complexion.
While some trends genuinely improve skincare routines, many gain popularity long before they’re backed by scientific evidence. Dermatologists are increasingly warning that chasing every beauty fad could do more harm than good, leaving skin irritated, damaged and more vulnerable to long-term problems.
Healthy skin isn’t about following every viral trend, it’s about understanding what your skin actually needs.
Here are some of the beauty trends skin experts wish women would think twice about.
Over-exfoliating in the name of “glass skin”
The pursuit of perfectly smooth, poreless skin has led many women to believe that more exfoliation equals better skin. In reality, using multiple exfoliating products daily can strip away the skin’s protective barrier.
Signs you’ve overdone it include:
- Persistent redness
- Stinging when applying products
- Dry, flaky patches
- Increased breakouts
- Heightened sensitivity
Instead of layering exfoliating acids, scrubs and resurfacing masks together, dermatologists generally recommend limiting chemical exfoliation to one to three times per week, depending on your skin type and the strength of the product.
Sometimes less really is more.
DIY skincare from the kitchen
Natural doesn’t automatically mean safe. Lemon juice, baking soda, toothpaste and undiluted apple cider vinegar continue to circulate online as affordable skincare solutions. Unfortunately, these household ingredients can disrupt the skin’s natural pH, trigger irritation and even cause chemical burns or pigmentation.
Similarly, applying essential oils directly to the skin without dilution may lead to allergic reactions or contact dermatitis.
Your kitchen is designed for cooking, not necessarily for skincare.
Layering too many active ingredients
Today’s skincare shelves are filled with powerhouse ingredients such as retinol, vitamin C, AHAs, BHAs, peptides and exfoliating toners. Individually, many of these ingredients can produce excellent results.
Used incorrectly together, however, they can overwhelm the skin.
Common mistakes include:
- Combining retinol with strong exfoliating acids every night
- Using multiple acid products in one routine
- Applying several active serums without allowing the skin barrier to recover
Rather than trying every trending ingredient simultaneously, build your routine slowly and introduce only one new active at a time.
Chasing viral products without knowing your skin type
Just because a product transformed someone else’s skin doesn’t mean it will work for yours.
Social media often showcases dramatic before-and-after results, but these rarely account for differences in skin type, genetics, hormones or underlying skin conditions.
A moisturiser designed for oily skin may leave dry skin feeling tight, while rich barrier creams loved by one influencer could trigger congestion in someone prone to acne.
Understanding your skin is far more valuable than following someone else’s routine.
Ignoring sunscreen while investing in expensive skincare
This remains one of dermatologists’ biggest frustrations.
Many women happily spend hundreds on serums designed to brighten pigmentation or reduce wrinkles while skipping daily sunscreen.
Without adequate sun protection, UV exposure continues to contribute to:
- Premature ageing
- Hyperpigmentation
- Fine lines
- Loss of collagen
- Increased skin cancer risk
Even the most expensive skincare products cannot undo ongoing sun damage if sunscreen isn’t part of your everyday routine.
Aggressive pore extraction
Watching satisfying extraction videos online can make squeezing every blackhead seem harmless.
It’s not.
Picking, squeezing and using metal extraction tools incorrectly can lead to:
- Broken capillaries
- Scarring
- Infection
- Increased inflammation
- Post-inflammatory pigmentation
If congestion is persistent, regular chemical exfoliation, prescription treatments or professional extractions are safer options.
Believing every product needs to “burn” to work
Many people mistakenly associate tingling, burning or intense redness with effectiveness.
In reality, discomfort often signals irritation rather than improvement.
While certain ingredients may produce a mild temporary sensation, persistent burning is a sign your skin barrier may be compromised.
Healthy skincare shouldn’t feel like an endurance test.
Constantly changing your routine
One of the biggest mistakes dermatologists see is “skin hopping.”
A new viral product launches, an influencer recommends another serum, then another overnight miracle appears. Before long, skincare routines consist of 12 products that change every week.
The problem?
Skin typically needs several weeks, sometimes even months to show meaningful improvement.
Constantly introducing new products makes it difficult to determine what’s working and increases the risk of irritation.
Consistency almost always delivers better long-term results than constantly chasing trends.
Skipping professional advice for internet diagnoses
Not every breakout is acne. Not every redness is rosacea. Not every dark spot is sun damage.
Skin conditions often look similar but require very different treatments. Self-diagnosing based on short videos or online advice can delay proper treatment and sometimes make conditions worse.
If a skin concern persists despite your usual routine, consulting a qualified dermatologist is often the fastest route to healthier skin.
Beauty trends can be inspiring, entertaining and occasionally game-changing but they shouldn’t replace evidence-based skincare or professional advice.
The healthiest skin isn’t created by following every viral hack. It’s built through consistency, patience and products that suit your individual skin type and concerns.
Rather than asking, ‘What’s trending?’ perhaps the better question is, ‘What does my skin need?’ Because healthy skin is always the goal.
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Featured Image: Pexels
