AHA vs BHA: What Each Acid Actually Does and Which Indian Skin Types Need More
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 04, 2026, 07:35 IST
AHA vs BHA: What Each Acid Actually Does and Which Indian Skin Types Need More
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
AHA and BHA are not interchangeable. Indian skin deals with melanin-driven pigmentation, humidity-fed oiliness, and pores that clog year-round, and each acid solves a different half of that problem. Here is what each one actually does to your skin, and how to read which one your skin is asking for.
Two acids , two completely different jobs
The most common AHA is glycolic acid, derived from sugarcane, followed by lactic acid from milk. The only BHA in widespread skincare use is salicylic acid. These are not interchangeable. Applying a BHA to dry, flaky skin will not do what a glycolic toner would. Applying an AHA to a blackhead-dense nose will not reach where salicylic acid can.
What Indian skin actually deals with
Indian skin also contends with humidity for most of the year. In coastal cities like Mumbai and Chennai, and during monsoon months across the country, sebaceous glands work overtime. Pores enlarge, comedones form, and surface congestion becomes a chronic condition rather than a seasonal one. That is BHA's territory.
The case for AHA in Indian skincare routines
Lactic acid is gentler than glycolic and better suited to skin that is reactive or new to acids. It also has mild humectant properties, meaning it draws moisture into the skin while it exfoliates. For Indian skin types prone to sensitivity or barrier disruption from years of harsh soap use, lactic acid at five to ten percent is often the more practical starting point than glycolic.
The case for BHA in Indian skincare routines
For Indian skin types with enlarged pores, a salicylic acid cleanser or toner used three to four times a week will do more than any clay mask or pore strip. The key is consistency, not concentration. Two percent salicylic acid used regularly outperforms five percent used once a fortnight.
One caution: BHA can be drying. If your skin feels tight or flaky after use, reduce frequency before reducing the product. Dryness triggers more sebum production, which defeats the purpose.
How to read your skin and choose
A workable approach: use a BHA product in the morning on oily zones, and an AHA product at night when cell turnover is higher and the skin is not about to face UV exposure. AHAs increase photosensitivity, so sunscreen the following morning is not optional. This is not a precaution, skipping SPF after an AHA application actively worsens the pigmentation you were trying to fix.
Neither acid replaces moisturiser. Neither replaces SPF. They are exfoliants, not treatments that work alone. The melanin your skin over-produces in response to stress does not disappear because you applied an acid once. It responds to consistent, low-irritation exfoliation over weeks.
The deeper pattern is this: Indian skin is often sold a single-product solution to what is actually a two-part problem. AHA handles what sits on the surface. BHA handles what sits inside the pore. The skin that deals with both pigmentation and congestion, which describes most Indian skin types through most of the year, is not choosing between two acids. It is sequencing them.