How to care for your skin during menopause
Menopause changes the skin because falling estrogen reduces collagen, moisture, elasticity, and repair capacity. As a result, skin often becomes drier, thinner, more sensitive, and more prone to fine lines, pigmentation, and sometimes acne. The most effective care focuses on gentle cleansing, richer moisturisers with hydrating ingredients, gradual retinol use, and daily sunscreen to protect against further collagen loss. Nutrition also matters, especially omega-3s, vitamins C and E, protein, and phytoestrogen-rich foods. Stress management and good sleep support skin repair by lowering cortisol. Small, targeted routine changes can help menopausal skin feel stronger, calmer, healthier, and more resilient over time.


Menopause changes skin in ways that can feel sudden and frustrating. What worked for years stops working. Dryness appears where it never existed. Lines deepen faster. The shift is not a cosmetic failure; it is a direct result of falling estrogen levels, reshaping how your skin produces collagen, retains moisture, and repairs itself. The good news: a few targeted adjustments make a real difference, and none of them require an expensive overhaul.
Why does menopause change the skin?
Estrogen plays a central role in maintaining skin thickness, moisture, and elasticity. As levels decline during perimenopause and menopause, collagen production drops. According to the American Academy of Dermatology, women can lose up to 30% of their collagen in the first five years after menopause, with a further 2% decline each year for the next two decades.
The practical effects are visible: skin becomes drier, thinner, and more prone to fine lines. The skin barrier weakens, making it more reactive to products and environmental irritants. Oil glands become less active, which reduces the skin's natural lubrication. Some women also experience adult-onset acne, increased facial hair, or uneven pigmentation, all driven by the same hormonal shifts that affect mood, sleep, and energy during this transition.
A 2013 review published in Advances in Dermatology and Allergology confirmed that collagen density during the post-menopausal period drops by approximately 2% annually and that the endocrine changes of menopause affect all skin layers, from epidermal thinning to degradation of elastin fibers and loss of subcutaneous fat.
What actually helps: a targeted menopause skin care routine
An effective routine during menopause does not need to be complicated. It needs to address the specific changes happening: moisture loss, collagen decline, barrier weakening, and sun vulnerability.
Switch to a cream-based cleanser
Foam and gel cleansers that felt fine in earlier years can strip already-dry menopausal skin further. A cream or oil-based cleanser removes impurities without disrupting the skin barrier. If your face feels tight after washing, the cleanser is too harsh. The AAD recommends avoiding soap on mature skin and opting for mild, hydrating formulas instead.
Prioritize deep hydration
A richer moisturizer containing hyaluronic acid, glycerin, or ceramides helps lock in moisture and reinforce the skin barrier. Applying moisturizer to slightly damp skin improves absorption. As Healthline notes, citing dermatologist recommendations, products with ceramides can help improve skin hydration in people with mild to moderate dryness, and hyaluronic acid helps plump and hydrate the skin.
Introduce retinol gradually
Retinol supports collagen production and cell turnover, making it one of the most effective ingredients for menopausal skin. Start with a low concentration (0.25% to 0.5%) two to three nights per week, then increase as the skin adjusts. A 2022 research review cited by Healthline suggests retinol can improve skin elasticity and help maintain hydration. Always pair retinol with sunscreen during the day, as it increases UV sensitivity.
Wear broad-spectrum sunscreen every single day
Sun damage accelerates collagen loss and worsens hyperpigmentation, both of which are already intensified by declining estrogen. SPF 30 or higher, applied every morning year-round, is non-negotiable. Mineral sunscreens with zinc oxide tend to be gentler on sensitized menopausal skin. The AAD lists daily sun protection as the single most important step for managing age spots and preventing further thinning.
Address hormonal acne with care
Some women experience breakouts during menopause for the first time in decades. As estrogen drops, androgens become relatively dominant, which can increase oil production, particularly along the jawline and chin. A salicylic acid cleanser can help unclog pores without over-drying. The AAD recommends avoiding traditional acne products designed for teenage skin, as they are typically too harsh for the thinner, drier skin of menopause.
Nutrition that supports menopausal skin
What goes into the body matters as much as what goes on the skin. Several nutrients directly support the structures that menopause is breaking down.
Omega-3 fatty acids (salmon, walnuts, flaxseed) support skin moisture and reduce inflammation. Vitamin C (citrus, bell peppers, strawberries) is essential for collagen synthesis. Vitamin E (almonds, sunflower seeds, avocado) protects against oxidative damage. Phytoestrogens (soy, flaxseed, chickpeas) may offer mild estrogenic support for skin. WebMD notes that approximately 50 mg of isoflavones daily (roughly 3 ounces of tempeh) may help with age-related skin thinning.
Adequate protein provides the amino acids needed for skin repair. Reducing sugar and processed foods helps manage the inflammation that accelerates collagen breakdown. Eating with hormonal phases in mind supports these nutritional foundations throughout the cycle.
The stress-skin connection during menopause
Cortisol, the stress hormone, directly breaks down collagen and impairs the skin's ability to repair itself. During menopause, when sleep is often disrupted, mood can be volatile, and the body is managing a major hormonal transition; stress levels tend to run higher, and the skin shows it.
This is where supporting the whole system becomes as important as any topical product. Breathwork, meditation, gentle movement, and sleep optimization all help regulate cortisol and support the nervous system through the transition. If you are still experiencing cyclical changes during perimenopause, such as mood shifts, brain fog, pain, and fatigue, the Samphire app offers personalized cycle tracking and over 80 guided practices designed to support each phase.
Samphire Neuroscience takes a brain-first approach to hormonal health, recognizing that the nervous system's response to hormonal transitions shapes what you experience across the board. Nettle™, a CE-marked Class IIa medical device available in the UK and EU, uses non-invasive brain stimulation to support pain management and mood regulation. For women in the US and globally, Lutea™ is a general wellness device designed to support focus, emotional balance, and well-being through every phase, including the perimenopausal years.
Common menopause skincare mistakes
Over-exfoliating
Menopausal skin is thinner and more sensitive than it was a decade ago. Limiting exfoliation to once or twice a week prevents barrier damage and reduces the redness and irritation that harsh scrubs can cause.
Skipping moisturizer because of breakouts
Even acne-prone skin needs hydration during menopause. Stripping moisture away can trigger the skin to produce more oil, making breakouts worse rather than better. A lightweight, non-comedogenic moisturizer balances hydration without clogging pores.
Ignoring the neck and chest
These areas lose collagen faster than the face and tend to show age-related changes earlier. Extending your cleanser, moisturizer, sunscreen, and retinol routine below the jawline protects skin that is often overlooked until damage is visible.
Introducing too many active ingredients at once
Adding retinol, vitamin C, exfoliating acids, and new serums all at once overwhelms sensitized skin. Introduce new products one at a time, waiting two to three weeks between additions. Patch testing on the wrist or inner elbow for 7 to 10 days is a sensible precaution.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best skin care routine for menopause?
A menopause routine should focus on gentle cleansing, deep hydration (hyaluronic acid, ceramides), gradual retinol introduction for collagen support, and daily broad-spectrum sunscreen. Supporting skin from within through nutrition and stress management also makes a noticeable difference.
Can menopause cause acne?
Yes. When estrogen drops, androgens become relatively dominant, which can increase oil production and trigger breakouts, particularly along the jawline and chin. Gentle salicylic acid cleansers are recommended over harsher traditional acne treatments.
At what age do menopausal skin changes start?
Skin changes often begin during perimenopause, which can start in the mid-to-late 40s. Some women notice changes as early as their late 30s. The most collagen loss occurs in the first five years after the final menstrual period.
Does diet affect menopausal skin?
Yes. Omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin C, vitamin E, and phytoestrogens all support skin health. Reducing sugar and processed foods helps manage the inflammation that accelerates collagen breakdown during this transition.
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