What Age Should You Start a Skincare Routine and What Ingredients Should It Actually Include
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 10, 2026, 07:30 IST
What Age Should You Start a Skincare Routine and What Ingredients Should It Actually Include
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
Most teenagers are sold a 12-step routine before they need one, and most adults are still skipping sunscreen. The right skincare routine depends on your age and skin stage, not on what's trending. Here's what dermatologists actually recommend, from the first cleanser a teen needs to the ingredients that matter most in your thirties.
The Teenager Who Doesn't Need a Serum
Sunscreen is the one exception worth pushing early. A broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher, applied every morning, is the single habit that pays the most dividends over a lifetime. Indian skin tones have more melanin than lighter skin, which offers some natural UV protection, but not enough to skip sunscreen, and not enough to prevent hyperpigmentation from chronic sun exposure. Starting this habit before 15 is genuinely useful.
The Twenties: When Habits Get Set
Retinol can begin in the mid-twenties, starting at a very low concentration (0.025 percent) applied once or twice a week at night. A 2016 study published in the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology confirmed that low-dose retinol used consistently over 12 weeks improved skin texture and reduced the appearance of fine lines without significant irritation. The key word is consistently, retinol works on a timeline of months, not days.
The Thirties: Where Ingredients Start to Matter More
Retinol concentration can increase, moving toward 0.05 to 0.1 percent if the skin has tolerated lower doses well. Eye cream becomes relevant here, though the ingredient matters more than the packaging: look for peptides or caffeine to address puffiness and fine lines around the eye area. Sunscreen remains non-negotiable and, if anything, more important than it was at 22.
The Forties and Beyond: Repair and Barrier Support
Chemical exfoliants should be used more carefully now. Over-exfoliation in the forties strips a barrier that takes longer to recover. Once a week with a low-strength AHA is enough. The instinct to do more, to compensate for what the skin has lost, tends to produce the opposite result.
One ingredient that consistently gets overlooked across all age groups is plain petroleum jelly, or its equivalent, applied over a moisturiser at night. Called slugging, this technique locks in whatever the skin has absorbed. It's inexpensive, effective, and dermatologist-approved. No serum required.
The cleanser you use at 40 should be gentler than the one you used at 16. That inversion surprises most people, but it reflects how skin changes: oilier in adolescence, drier and more sensitive over time. A routine built on that understanding, rather than on what's being marketed this season, tends to work.