Your 13-year-old has a better skincare routine than you did at 25. She's got a cleanser, a toner, a vitamin C serum, a retinol, a niacinamide serum, and an SPF. She learned about all of them on TikTok. Her skin is red, dry, and congested — and she's buying more products to fix it.
This is not a quirky parenting observation. It's a clinical pattern dermatologists are now seeing at scale.
Why teen skin is biologically different
Adult anti-aging actives are designed to address a specific problem: skin that has lost collagen, accumulated UV damage, and slowed its natural cell turnover rate. Teen skin has none of those problems. It turns over rapidly on its own. Its collagen is intact. Its natural protective mechanisms are working.
What makes teen and tween skin vulnerable is different from adult skin. Research from Pai Skincare's tween skincare study found that pre-teen skin has significantly lower levels of Cutibacterium acnes — a bacterium associated with healthy sebum production and barrier protection in adults. That lower baseline means less natural resilience when potent actives are applied. The barrier disruption that causes redness and irritation in an adult might be temporary; in a tween's developing skin, it can prime the skin for longer-term sensitivity.
A 2024 study from Northwestern University (reported in Newsweek and Skin Inc.) found that TikTok-driven teen skincare routines were causing measurable skin barrier harm in children and adolescents. The researchers analyzed ingredient lists of products popular in teen routines and found common use of retinoids, AHAs, BHAs, and high-concentration vitamin C — all ingredients with recommended minimum ages of 18–25 in most clinical dermatology guidelines. Nearly half of tweens in a parallel survey reported visible skin reactions. The study called specifically for age-appropriate product formulation guidelines.
The psychological piece matters too
Skincare brands targeting teens are not neutral. They are built around the premise that teen skin is a problem to solve. For girls aged 9–18 — already navigating significant body image pressure — a daily ritual built around "fixing" their face has psychological consequences beyond skin sensitivity.
Research on teen skin anxiety consistently shows that the more products a teen uses, the more she perceives her skin as problematic. The routine itself can create the anxiety it promises to resolve. This isn't a reason to forbid all skincare — it's a reason to distinguish between what teen skin actually needs and what the market is selling.
The distinction is real and it's simple: a gentle cleanser, a broad-spectrum SPF, and a fragrance-free moisturizer are what dermatologists recommend for teen skin. Everything else is designed for adults.
What to tell the teenager in your life
- If the skin is reacting — redness, peeling, breakouts that weren't there before — the most likely culprit is the actives, not the absence of more actives. Strip back to the basics: cleanser, moisturizer, SPF.
- Niacinamide at low concentrations (2–4%) is the one active with reasonable safety data in younger skin and a genuine purpose (managing oiliness, mild hyperpigmentation from acne). It doesn't need to appear alongside retinol.
- Retinol and AHAs are not appropriate for teens unless a dermatologist has prescribed them for a specific clinical reason (severe acne, keratosis pilaris). The anti-aging rationale doesn't apply at 14.
- SPF is genuinely the most important skincare habit a teenager can build. The photoprotection applied in teen years has the greatest long-term impact on skin aging of any single product.
When teen skin warrants a dermatologist
If a teenager has acne beyond the mild, persistent hyperpigmentation, or a diagnosed skin condition, a board-certified dermatologist can prescribe age-appropriate treatments that have been evaluated for adolescent skin. Over-the-counter anti-aging products are not that. If skin has been badly disrupted by actives — significant peeling, persistent redness, or barrier damage — a dermatologist visit is worth it to get a repair plan rather than continuing to experiment independently.
References
- Personal Care Insights. UK study finds rise of tweens using retinol, sparking skin health concerns. 2025. personalcareinsights.com
- Pai Skincare. Pioneering study on tweens using active skincare. 2024. paiskincare.us
- Northwestern University. TikTok teen skin-care routines are harmful. Northwestern Now. June 2025. northwestern.edu
- Newsweek. Active Skincare Ingredients Are Harming Tweens. 2024. newsweek.com
- American Chemical Society. Editorial: When it comes to cosmetics, let kids be kids. C&EN. June 2025. cen.acs.org