What microneedling actually does to your skin
Microneedling creates controlled micro-wounds. Your body responds with inflammation, floods the area with growth factors, and activates fibroblasts (the collagen factories). This is real biology. Collagen production increases measurably.
But here's where most clinics get it wrong: they stop at the mechanism and jump to "you'll look younger." The clinical evidence doesn't support that leap. Increased collagen on a biopsy doesn't automatically translate to visible wrinkle reduction. Microneedling creates measurable collagen, but whether that changes how your skin looks is where the evidence gets murkier than the marketing claims.
A 2022 systematic review by Dogra et al. in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology (JAAD), analysing nine RCTs in patients with atrophic acne scars, found statistically significant improvements in scar grading scores across all included studies, with microneedling performing comparably to fractional ablative laser as a monotherapy in several trials. A 2024 network meta-analysis including 24 studies and 1,546 participants confirmed these findings and found combination approaches (microneedling plus PRP or chemical peels) produced superior outcomes to monotherapy.
Where the evidence is strong: atrophic acne scars
This is where microneedling actually delivers. Pitted acne scars: those indented marks that linger after inflammatory breakouts. Clinical trials consistently show meaningful improvement. Most women shift from moderate to mild scarring in 3-6 sessions, which basically means the scars become visibly less prominent.
But not all scars respond equally. Rolling scars (shallow, broad indentations) improve significantly. Ice-pick scars (narrow, deep punctures) improve less. Rolling scars and ice-pick scars need different approaches. Deeper scars often need combination treatment (microneedling plus subcision or CROSS technique) to get real results. And here's the part clinics rarely stress: don't start scar treatment while acne is still active. Wait three months minimum. Fresh breakouts on needled skin can spread bacteria and actually worsen your scars.
Do not begin scar treatment while active acne is present. Fresh breakouts on needled skin can spread bacteria and worsen outcomes. Achieve stable skin for at least three months before beginning a course of microneedling for scars.
Where the evidence is weak: fine lines, pores, and "glow"
The evidence on fine lines and pore tightening is thin. Yes, studies exist. But they're small, often uncontrolled, and nowhere near as robust as the scar research. You might see temporary hydration and plumpness from the inflammatory response. But permanent fine line reduction? Not reliably demonstrated in high-quality trials.
Most dermatologists don't mention this: retinoids and daily SPF have far stronger anti-aging evidence than microneedling. If you want skin tightening, fractional radiofrequency microneedling (more invasive, different mechanism) shows better results. But standard microneedling? It's not your best bet for wrinkles.
Atrophic acne scars (rolling and boxcar)
Consistent RCT evidence for meaningful improvement in scar grading over three to six sessions. Most evidence for rolling and boxcar patterns; ice-pick scars benefit less from microneedling alone.
Stretch marks (striae distensae)
Studies suggest improvement in texture and color, particularly with combination approaches. Evidence is promising but drawn from smaller studies; consult a dermatologist about suitability for your specific stretch marks.
Fine lines, skin laxity, pore appearance
Some observational improvement noted in small studies, but high-quality RCT evidence is lacking. These outcomes should not be the primary reason to book a course, and should be understood as possible. Not promised. Secondary benefits.
What to ask before you book
- "What needle depth and device will you be using for my skin concern?" Clinical microneedling uses 0.5โ2.5mm depth in a medical-grade device: not a dermaroller. At-home products marketed as microneedling do not reach effective depths.
- "What is your experience treating my Fitzpatrick skin type?" Darker skin types (IVโVI) have higher risk of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) from any needle-based treatment. Choose practitioners with documented experience treating your skin tone.
- "What is the evidence base for the outcome you're promising?" If a clinic is promising pore shrinkage or wrinkle erasure without caveats, that's a signal to ask more questions, or seek a second opinion.
- "What aftercare do I need, and when can I use active ingredients again?" The skin barrier is temporarily compromised post-needling; retinoids and exfoliants should be paused for several days, as advised by your practitioner.
When to see a dermatologist first
If you have active acne, rosacea, eczema, or psoriasis, consult a dermatologist before microneedling. Needling over active inflammation can worsen these conditions. If you have a history of keloid scarring, microneedling may not be appropriate. A dermatological assessment before booking a course at an aesthetics clinic is always worthwhile for any structural skin concern.
References
- Aust MC, et al. Percutaneous collagen induction therapy: an alternative treatment for scars, wrinkles, and skin laxity. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. 2008;121(4):1421โ1429. doi:10.1097/01.prs.0000304612.72899.02
- Dogra S, et al. Efficacy of microneedling as monotherapy for atrophic acne scars: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 2022. PubMed
- Chawla S. Split face comparative study of microneedling with PRP versus microneedling with vitamin C in treating atrophic post acne scars. Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery. 2024. PMC
- Alster TS, Graham PM. Microneedling: a review and practical guide. Dermatologic Surgery. 2018;44(3):397โ404. PubMed