Which Dark Spot Is It? 

Not all dark spots are the same. Acne marks, sun damage, and hormonal pigmentation each behave differently and require the right approach. Identifying your type of dark spot is key to achieving real results without causing further irritation.
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Why All Dark Spots Aren’t the Same

Many people treat every dark spot as if it came from the same cause. In reality, pigmentation forms at different depths of the skin and responds to different triggers. When the wrong approach is used, that stubborn dark spot can linger—or even worsen.

Here’s why identifying the type matters:

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    Each dark spot forms for a different reason

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    Treatments that help one type may do nothing for another

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    Some pigmentation requires long-term management, not quick fixes

Managing Recurring Pigmentation
Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation (PIH): The Aftermath of Inflammation
Sun Spots: Accumulated UV Damage
Important

Quick Comparison

Understanding how each dark spot type behaves helps set realistic expectations:

Melasma: hormone- and heat-triggered, recurring

PIH: inflammation-based, temporary with care

Sun spots: UV-induced, cumulative damage

Each dark spot type requires a different balance of prevention, treatment, and maintenance. Treating them all the same is one of the biggest skincare mistakes beginners make.

Each type needs a different approach—prevention, treatment, and maintenance. Treating them the same is a common skincare mistake.

FAQ

Have questions?
We’ve got answers  

Skincare isn’t about erasing your past—it’s about supporting your skin’s future with confidence.

What is the difference between melasma, PIH, and sun spots?

Melasma is hormone- and heat-related, appearing as symmetrical patches.

Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) occurs after acne, injuries, or irritation.

Sunspots form from years of UV exposure and usually appear later in life.
Each type of dark spot responds differently to treatment.

Can a dark spot fade on its own?

Some dark spots, like mild PIH, may fade naturally over time. Melasma and sun spots often require consistent treatment and sun protection to see improvement.

How long does it take to see results?

PIH: often 4–8 weeks with consistent care

Melasma: 8–12 weeks or longer, may recur without prevention

Sunspots: 8–16 weeks or more, depending on depth and sun exposure.

Patience is key when treating any dark spot.

Can I prevent dark spots from forming?

Yes! Prevention focuses on:

Daily broad-spectrum SPF

Avoiding excessive heat for melasma

Gentle skincare to prevent irritation-induced PIH

Limiting sun exposure for sun spots
FAQ