How to Build a Skincare Routine for Acne-Prone Skin

Acne-prone skin requires a careful balance: you need to control oil and bacteria without stripping the skin barrier, which can actually make breakouts worse. This guide walks through building a routine that works with your skin, not against it.

The Acne Skin Routine Framework

The key principle: gentle + targeted. Aggressive cleansing and over-exfoliation are the most common mistakes that perpetuate breakout cycles.

Step 1: The Right Cleanser

For acne-prone skin, a gentle gel cleanser with salicylic acid (0.5-2%) or a natural antimicrobial bar (kojic acid + turmeric) provides the cleansing action needed without stripping. Avoid heavy foaming cleansers with sulfates — they trigger the skin to produce more oil in compensation.

Step 2: Niacinamide Serum

Niacinamide at 10% is the cornerstone active for acne-prone skin. It reduces sebum production by up to 23%, minimizes pore appearance, calms inflammation, and — crucially — strengthens the skin barrier to prevent future breakouts. Use morning and evening.

Step 3: Lightweight Moisturizer

Many acne-prone skin sufferers skip moisturizer — this is a mistake. Dehydrated skin overcompensates by producing more oil. Use a non-comedogenic, oil-free moisturizer with hyaluronic acid or ceramides. A thin layer is enough.

Step 4: SPF (Non-Negotiable)

Many acne treatments (niacinamide, retinol, AHAs) increase photosensitivity. Always use mineral or gel-based SPF 30+ in the morning to prevent post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation from existing breakouts worsening with sun exposure.

What to Avoid

  • Heavy occlusives (petroleum, coconut oil, shea butter) — comedogenic for many skin types
  • Excessive exfoliation — damages the skin barrier, perpetuates breakouts
  • Pore strips — temporarily satisfying, permanently damaging to pores
  • Touching your face — transfers bacteria from hands to pores

See our Recommended Products page for an Acne Fighter Kit with all three core products. Use code RSP5 for $5 off.


Sources & References

This article is reviewed by the Radiant Skin Project editorial team against current peer-reviewed literature. Claims are rated by evidence strength. Always consult a qualified dermatologist for personalized medical guidance.

Scientific Review Rating: 🟢 Strong Evidence | 🟡 Moderate Evidence | 🟠 Emerging Evidence | ⚪ Insufficient Evidence
Last reviewed: April 2026 | Editorial policy: See our standards

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