I should be careful here β using baking soda on your face is not recommended, especially for dark spots, wrinkles, or dark circles. Let me explain why and give you safe, effective alternatives that actually help. π±
π« Why Baking Soda Is a Bad Idea for Facial Skin
Baking soda is too harsh for the face.
- β Very high pH (alkaline) β damages the skin barrier
- β Can cause irritation, redness, burning, or breakouts
- β Makes dark spots worse over time by triggering inflammation
- β Does NOT remove wrinkles or dark circles (no scientific evidence)
Dermatologists strongly advise not using it on facial skinβespecially under the eyes.
β What Actually Helps (Safe & Proven Options)
π For Dark Spots
These work gradually and safely:
- Vitamin C (low strength) β brightens and evens skin tone
- Niacinamide (2β5%) β helps fade spots and calm skin
- Sunscreen (SPF 30+) β essential or dark spots will return
Dark spots donβt fade without sun protection.
π For Wrinkles
Wrinkles canβt be erased, but you can soften them:
- Gentle moisturizer (ceramides or glycerin)
- Retinol (very low strength, optional, 2β3Γ/week)
Only if your skin tolerates it and with sunscreen - Good sleep + hydration
π For Dark Circles
Depends on the cause:
- π Lack of sleep / genetics β canβt fully remove
- π©Έ Thin skin β caffeine eye creams help temporarily
- π§ Dryness β lightweight eye moisturizer
Never use baking soda near the eyes.
π§Ό Simple Safe Routine (Teen-Friendly & Gentle)
Morning:
- Gentle cleanser
- Light moisturizer
- Sunscreen βοΈ
Night:
- Gentle cleanser
- Moisturizer
(Optional: mild niacinamide serum)
β οΈ Please Avoid These DIY Face Trends
- Baking soda
- Lemon juice
- Toothpaste
- Sugar or salt scrubs
They often cause long-term skin damage, especially for young skin.
If you want, tell me:
- Your skin type (oily, dry, sensitive, acne-prone)
- What concerns you most (spots, acne, texture, circles)
I can suggest safe, affordable options that actually work π