That’s a classic skincare scam / viral misinformation pattern.
Why this claim is false
- Baking soda is alkaline and harsh on skin (high pH)
- It can damage the skin barrier, causing:
- dryness
- irritation
- redness
- worsening sensitivity and fine lines over time
- It does not remove wrinkles or “rebuild collagen”
Wrinkles and blemishes don’t disappear overnight from a paste—those changes involve skin structure that takes weeks to months and often needs proven ingredients or treatments.
Why these posts say “see more / you must comment”
That language is used to:
- boost engagement (likes, comments, shares)
- push people into external links or ad funnels
- make the “recipe” feel secret or exclusive
It’s not about skincare—it’s about clicks.
What actually works for wrinkles/blemishes (evidence-based)
If someone wants real results:
For wrinkles:
- Retinoids (vitamin A derivatives)
- Daily sunscreen (most important)
- Moisturizers with hyaluronic acid or ceramides
For blemishes:
- Salicylic acid (for clogged pores)
- Benzoyl peroxide (for acne bacteria)
- Gentle cleansing + non-irritating skincare
Bottom line
Baking soda is not a safe or effective anti-wrinkle treatment. It can actually harm the skin if used regularly.
If you want, I can break down which viral “natural skincare hacks” are harmless, which are useless, and which are actually risky—there are a lot of these circulating online.