Free tool · ingredient-by-ingredient pause schedule
Pregnancy / TTC skincare pause — when to stop what.
Most "pregnancy-safe skincare" guides list what to avoid once you\'re pregnant. The harder question is when to stop while you\'re trying to conceive — and which products need a wash-out period before the active window. Tretinoin clears your system in 3 weeks. Hydroquinone is straightforward. Salicylic acid varies by concentration. Each ingredient has its own pause timeline. Eight questions; we map an exact stop schedule for each product in your current routine plus pregnancy-safe swaps.
Most topical skincare ingredients absorb minimally — but a few do reach systemic levels meaningful enough to require pausing before and during pregnancy. The dermatology consensus on TTC and pregnancy skincare: stop topical retinoids and hydroquinone 1 month before active TTC. High-percentage salicylic acid, certain essential oils, and some specific actives also pause. Vitamin C, niacinamide, hyaluronic acid, azelaic acid, glycolic acid (low %), and sunscreen continue. Mineral SPF becomes more important, not less. The tricky middle: some ingredients have unclear pregnancy data — most OBs default to "stop if unsure" but the actual risk varies dramatically.
The pause hierarchy — ranked by how confidently to stop
Hard stops (well-evidenced fetal risk)
- All topical retinoids: tretinoin, tazarotene, adapalene, retinaldehyde, retinol, retinyl esters. Wash-out: ~3 weeks for tretinoin (5-day half-life of metabolites), shorter for retinol. Stop ideally 1 month before active TTC; immediately upon positive pregnancy test.
- Oral isotretinoin (Accutane): strongly teratogenic. Hard stop minimum 1 month before TTC, ideally per dermatologist guidance with iPLEDGE compliance.
- Hydroquinone: high systemic absorption (~35-45%), pregnancy Class C. Stop 1 month before active TTC; resume after breastfeeding ends.
- High-percentage chemical peels (TCA, glycolic >20%, salicylic >2%): deeper skin disruption + higher systemic absorption. Skip in-office peels during TTC and pregnancy.
Caution stops (unclear data, OBs typically recommend pause)
- Topical salicylic acid >2%: low-percentage (≤2%) likely OK in spot use; daily face-wide use or higher % typically paused. Aspirin (salicylate, oral) and high-dose topical salicylates share the concern.
- Benzoyl peroxide: pregnancy Class C, but most OBs and derms consider OK in low concentrations (2.5-5%) and spot use. Pause if unsure.
- Hydroquinone alternatives like kojic acid, arbutin: limited pregnancy data. Most OBs pause due to similar mechanism concerns.
- Essential oils (high concentrations): especially clary sage, rosemary, peppermint at therapeutic doses. Trace amounts in commercial skincare typically OK.
- Certain prescription topicals: minoxidil for hair (oral, topical >5%), tazarotene, certain combination acne creams. Verify with dermatologist.
Continue (pregnancy-safe)
- Vitamin C (all forms): continues safely. AM application under SPF.
- Niacinamide 5-10%: well-tolerated, no pregnancy concerns.
- Hyaluronic acid, glycerin, panthenol: all safe; foundation of pregnancy skincare.
- Azelaic acid 15-20%: pregnancy Class B; the gold-standard pregnancy-safe acne and pigmentation treatment.
- Glycolic acid <10% home use: low systemic absorption; generally OK.
- Lactic acid <10%: similar to glycolic, generally OK.
- Mandelic acid: limited data but considered safe.
- Peptides: generally safe, including copper peptides and signal peptides.
- Ceramides, squalane, jojoba, dimethicone: all safe; barrier-supportive options.
- Mineral sunscreen (zinc oxide, titanium dioxide): pregnancy-safe and especially important during pregnancy due to melasma risk. Iron-oxide-tinted versions block visible light too.
- Bakuchiol: plant-based retinoid alternative, no contraindication during pregnancy. Top "natural retinol alternative" pick for TTC/pregnant.
Pregnancy-safe swaps for common concerns
Acne
- Pre-pregnancy: tretinoin / adapalene + BPO + niacinamide
- Pregnancy-safe stack: azelaic acid 15-20% (Finacea prescription or Paula\'s Choice 10% Booster OTC) + BPO 2.5% spot + niacinamide 5-10%
- For severe pregnancy acne: see dermatologist — oral erythromycin and topical clindamycin are pregnancy-safe prescription options
Anti-aging
- Pre-pregnancy: tretinoin or retinol nightly
- Pregnancy-safe stack: bakuchiol 1% + vitamin C 15-20% AM + peptide serum + daily mineral SPF
- Note: 9-12 months of paused retinoid isn\'t catastrophic — collagen loss is gradual, and the safe-swaps maintain quality
Hyperpigmentation / melasma
- Pre-pregnancy: hydroquinone, vitamin C, retinoid
- Pregnancy-safe stack: azelaic acid 20% + tranexamic acid (oral or topical — confirm with OB) + iron-oxide-tinted mineral SPF reapplied frequently + vitamin C
- Note: pregnancy is when melasma often DEBUTS — aggressive sun protection is critical even if no melasma yet
Eczema / sensitive skin
- Continues safely: ceramide moisturizers, niacinamide, panthenol, centella asiatica (cica)
- For flares: hydrocortisone 1% short-course is pregnancy-safe per most OBs; stronger steroids require obstetric clearance
The TTC timeline — exact months before
Best practice: 1 month before active TTC
- Stop all topical retinoids (tretinoin, tazarotene, adapalene, retinaldehyde, retinol, retinyl esters)
- Stop hydroquinone
- Stop high-percentage acid peels at home
- Hold off on new aggressive in-office procedures (lasers, deep peels)
- Start your pregnancy-safe stack so it\'s already established when you conceive
3 months before TTC if you can
- Verify the OB/GYN status of any prescription topicals (especially combination acne creams, prescription melasma treatments)
- Stock up on pregnancy-safe alternatives
- Address any active conditions now while you can use full-strength treatments (e.g., aggressive course of tretinoin for established skin quality before pausing)
If you\'re already pregnant
- Stop retinoids and hydroquinone immediately (don\'t complete the tube)
- Pause anything you\'re uncertain about
- Continue the safe core: gentle cleanser, ceramide moisturizer, mineral SPF, vitamin C, niacinamide
- For acne and melasma specifically: azelaic acid 15-20% is the workhorse pregnancy treatment
Breastfeeding considerations
Breastfeeding restrictions are generally lighter than pregnancy:
- Continue avoiding: oral isotretinoin (strict), high-systemic-absorption ingredients near nipple area
- Often resumed: topical retinoids (low concentration, applied during non-nursing times); but check with pediatrician
- Continue safe: all the pregnancy-safe stack
- Hydroquinone: most lactation specialists advise continued avoidance; alternatives exist
What to expect during the pause
- Acne: hormonal pregnancy acne is common (T2 especially); azelaic acid + BPO spot manage it
- Melasma debut: 15-50% of pregnant women develop it; aggressive iron-oxide-tinted SPF prevents
- Skin sensitivity: increased reactivity is common; simplify routine
- Loss of "perfection": pre-pregnancy skin quality temporarily plateaus or backslides; resumes after breastfeeding ends
Why pause before TTC, not after positive test
Some women wait until positive pregnancy test to stop teratogenic products. The risk: organogenesis (the most teratogen-sensitive period) is weeks 4-8 — sometimes before you know you\'re pregnant. Tretinoin has a 3-week wash-out for active metabolites. Stopping 1 month before active TTC ensures no exposure during early pregnancy if conception happens immediately.
For irregular cycles or longer TTC timelines, the calculus is different — pausing for 12+ months while trying isn\'t practical. Many OBs suggest stopping when you START actively trying and accepting a tiny window of exposure risk for the first cycle, which is reasonable. Discuss with your OB.
Common questions
When should I stop tretinoin before trying to conceive?
Best practice: stop tretinoin 1 month before active TTC. Tretinoin has a 3-week half-life for its active metabolites, so 1 month gives a full wash-out before potential conception. The risk: organogenesis (the most teratogen-sensitive window) occurs weeks 4-8 of pregnancy — sometimes before you know you\'re pregnant. Stopping 1 month before TTC ensures no exposure during early pregnancy if conception happens immediately. For irregular cycles or longer TTC timelines (12+ months), discuss with your OB — most accept a small first-cycle exposure window rather than years-long pause. Also stop: tazarotene, adapalene, retinaldehyde, retinol, retinyl esters. Switch to bakuchiol (the pregnancy-safe "retinol alternative") + vitamin C + niacinamide + daily mineral SPF.
Is salicylic acid safe during pregnancy?
Low-percentage salicylic acid (≤2%) for spot use is generally considered safe by most OBs and dermatologists. Daily face-wide use or higher concentrations (5%+ leave-on, professional peels with high BHA) typically pauses during pregnancy. The concern relates to salicylate absorption (aspirin family) — the data is reassuring at low percentages but cautious at higher. The safer pregnancy-safe alternatives for acne: azelaic acid 15-20% (gold standard, Class B), benzoyl peroxide 2.5% spot, niacinamide 5-10% daily, glycolic acid <10% home use. For severe pregnancy acne, prescription topical clindamycin and oral erythromycin are pregnancy-safe options — discuss with your OB and dermatologist.
Can I use vitamin C during pregnancy?
Yes — all forms of topical vitamin C are considered pregnancy-safe. L-ascorbic acid, magnesium ascorbyl phosphate, sodium ascorbyl phosphate, THD ascorbate, ascorbyl glucoside all continue without restriction. Vitamin C is particularly valuable during pregnancy because it pairs with mineral sunscreen for melasma prevention (15-50% of pregnant women develop melasma, often debuts in the second trimester). Apply 10-20% vitamin C in the morning, then mineral sunscreen. Continue throughout breastfeeding. For pigmentation specifically during pregnancy: vitamin C + niacinamide + azelaic acid 15-20% + iron-oxide-tinted mineral SPF is the safe gold-standard stack.
Can I resume my retinoid right after giving birth?
If you\'re NOT breastfeeding: yes, can resume immediately. If breastfeeding: many lactation specialists and dermatologists clear topical retinoids during breastfeeding because systemic absorption is minimal — but apply during non-nursing times and avoid the breast/nipple area. Confirm with your pediatrician. The conservative approach: continue with bakuchiol + vitamin C + niacinamide + mineral SPF until breastfeeding ends, then resume tretinoin. The break is typically 1-2 years total (TTC + pregnancy + breastfeeding). Skin recovery after resumption is rapid — visible improvement returns in 8-12 weeks. Worth noting: hydroquinone is generally not resumed during breastfeeding even though retinoids might be.