Free tool · home peel vs in-office decision
At-home chemical peel — should you, and which one?
DIY peel kits at 30-50% glycolic / lactic / mandelic ARE strong enough to produce real results — and strong enough to produce real chemical burns if you skip neutralization or pick the wrong depth. TCA peels at "home" are dangerous; anyone selling 15%+ TCA for home use is selling a hospital visit. Eight questions to sort the safe path: home peel at the right percentage, in-office for medium-depth needs, or stick to daily AHA serums.
Home chemical peels at 30-50% alpha hydroxy acids (lactic, glycolic, mandelic) or 20-30% salicylic acid are real treatments — not just "stronger toner." The right depth on the right skin produces ~10-30% improvement in pigmentation, texture, and superficial scarring over 6-8 sessions. The wrong depth produces chemical burns and PIH that take months to heal. Critical safety rules: never TCA at home (medium-depth, hospital territory if mistimed), always have a neutralizer ready, never combine with retinoid use, do strict patch testing on skin of color due to PIH risk, and accept that some concerns (deeper scars, melasma) need in-office treatment regardless of how aggressive your home routine is.
Peel types — what\'s safe at home, what\'s not
Lactic acid 30-50% — gentlest home peel
Lactic acid is a larger molecule than glycolic — it penetrates less aggressively, making it more forgiving for sensitive or first-time peel users. Mild exfoliation, modest pigmentation effect, surface hydration. Good entry point.
Use case: sensitive skin, first-time peelers, mild texture concerns, mild surface dryness.
Home safety: yes with proper preparation.
Top picks: Perfect Image Lactic Acid 50% Gel Peel ($30), Skin Beauty Solutions Lactic Acid 40% ($21).
Mandelic acid 25-40% — best for skin of color
Mandelic acid is the largest AHA molecule — penetrates least aggressively. Lower PIH risk in Fitzpatrick IV-VI. Mild antibacterial action also helps acne. The smart pick for skin of color or anyone PIH-prone.
Use case: skin of color, PIH-prone, mild-moderate concerns.
Home safety: yes.
Top picks: Skin Beauty Solutions Mandelic 40% ($25).
Glycolic acid 30-50% — strongest home AHA
Glycolic has the smallest AHA molecule — penetrates fastest and deepest at any given concentration. Strongest home peel option. Higher risk of irritation and PIH; not for first-timers or sensitive skin.
Use case: resilient skin, experienced peel users, moderate texture/pigmentation concerns in lighter skin.
Home safety: requires experience and strict protocol.
Top picks: Perfect Image Glycolic 50% ($30), MUAC Glycolic 30-50% ($16-25).
Salicylic acid 20-30% (BHA peel) — for oily/acne-prone
Salicylic at peel concentrations is oil-soluble — penetrates pores for acne treatment. Different action from AHA peels (BHA goes into pores; AHA acts on surface).
Use case: oily skin, active acne with comedones, blackhead clusters.
Home safety: yes; lower irritation risk than AHA at equivalent percentages.
Top picks: Perfect Image Salicylic 20% Gel Peel ($30), Platinum Skin Care BHA 30% ($22).
Jessner peels (lactic + resorcinol + salicylic)
Multi-acid formula — variable depth depending on application coats. Original Jessner uses resorcinol which is rarely sold for home use. Modified Jessner (without resorcinol) is gentler. Increased risk vs single-acid peels.
Home safety: only with experience and modified versions.
TCA peels at 15%+ — NEVER at home
Trichloroacetic acid produces medium-depth peels at 15%+ concentration. Despite some retailers selling it for "home use," these go into the dermis and require sterile clinical conditions. Risks of DIY TCA: deep chemical burns, infection, persistent PIH, scarring, ocular damage if splashed.
Home safety: NO. Always in-office at a board-certified dermatologist.
Phenol peels — never home, rarely office
Deep peel, almost surgical. Performed under cardiac monitoring due to systemic toxicity. NEVER at home. Used rarely in cosmetic medicine for severe sun damage.
Pre-peel protocol (start 7-14 days before)
- Stop all retinoids 5-7 days before: tretinoin, retinol, adapalene
- Stop all AHA/BHA daily use 3-5 days before
- Stop vitamin C 2 days before (irritation potential)
- Strict daily mineral SPF 50+ for 7+ days before
- For pigmentation-prone skin: use 2-4 weeks of hydroquinone 2-4% prior, niacinamide 5-10% daily — this primes the skin to reduce PIH risk
- Patch test the actual peel: small amount on inner forearm 48 hours before. Watch for severe reaction.
- NO active acne lesions in treatment area: wait for resolution before peeling
Peel-day protocol
- Set up equipment: peel solution, neutralizer (1 tsp baking soda in 1 cup water for AHA; for salicylic, neutralizer typically not needed but water rinse on hand), timer, fan, cool washcloth, hyaluronic acid serum + ceramide moisturizer for after.
- Cleanse with pH-prep cleanser: typically a low-pH cleanser to lower skin pH for absorption. Avoid oil cleansers (creates a barrier).
- Pat dry. Skin should be COMPLETELY dry.
- Apply petroleum jelly to peel-area edges: nostrils, corners of mouth, lash line — protects sensitive zones.
- Apply peel solution in one even pass: with a cotton ball or brush. Avoid eyes immediately.
- Start timer immediately: typical first-time start at 1-2 minutes. Build up to 5-7 minutes over multiple sessions.
- Cool fan or cold air: reduces sting
- At timer end, immediately neutralize: AHA → spray with baking soda solution and pat off. Salicylic → cool water rinse. Do NOT exceed your planned time.
- Cleanse face gently with cool water
- Apply hyaluronic acid + ceramide moisturizer immediately
- NO skincare actives for 5-7 days: just cleanser, moisturizer, mineral SPF
Risks and red flags
- PIH (hyperpigmentation after the peel): skin of color is at high risk. Mandelic preferred over glycolic. Strict pre-peel prep and SPF after.
- Chemical burn: typically from leaving peel on too long, applying too thick, or applying on broken skin. White frosting + intense pain = sign of burn; rinse immediately and seek medical attention.
- Persistent erythema: redness lasting >7 days needs derm evaluation
- Scarring: rare with home peels but possible with excessive depth or infection
- Herpes reactivation: peels can trigger oral herpes outbreaks; consider prophylactic acyclovir if you\'re prone
- Eye injury: NEVER apply near eyes; goggles or careful application essential
- Allergic contact dermatitis: less common with AHA; possible with multi-acid formulas
When to choose in-office over home
- Moderate to severe acne scars (medium-depth TCA territory)
- Melasma (especially in skin of color — risk too high for home)
- Significant photo-damage in older skin (medium-depth needed)
- Fitzpatrick V-VI with concerns beyond mild texture
- First time peeling and uncertain about technique
- Active or recent isotretinoin use (6-month restriction either way; in-office allows safer protocol)
- Sensitive or barrier-compromised skin
- Pregnancy or breastfeeding (skip peels entirely)
In-office peel pricing (for reference)
- Superficial peel (similar to home-strength): $100-300/session, 3-6 sessions = $300-1800
- Medium-depth peel (TCA 15-30%, Jessner+TCA): $200-600/session, 1-3 sessions = $200-1800
- Deep peel (rare, phenol): $1500-4000, one session
- For most people: home superficial peels + in-office for any medium-depth needs is the optimal balance
Combination with skincare actives
- Wait 7+ days post-peel before resuming retinoid
- Wait 5+ days before resuming AHA/BHA daily
- Vitamin C can resume after 3-5 days
- Niacinamide and hyaluronic acid safe day 1 post-peel
- Sunscreen daily mandatory for at least 4 weeks post-peel
Common questions
Are at-home chemical peels safe?
Lactic 30-50%, mandelic 25-40%, glycolic 30-50%, and salicylic 20-30% home peels are reasonably safe when you follow strict protocol: 7-day retinoid pause before, low-pH cleanse, complete dryness, timed exposure (1-2 min first time, build to 5-7 min), immediate neutralization, and strict 7-day post-peel restriction on actives. TCA peels at 15%+ are NOT safe for home use despite retailers selling them — they require sterile clinical conditions. For skin of color (Fitzpatrick V-VI), mandelic acid is preferred over glycolic due to lower PIH risk. Pregnant, on isotretinoin, with active acne, or with rosacea: skip home peels entirely. For melasma and acne scars: in-office is significantly safer and more effective than any home alternative.
What percentage of glycolic acid is safe at home?
30-50% glycolic acid is the typical home-peel range — 50% being the upper end for experienced users on resilient skin. Anything above 50% glycolic at home risks chemical burns and persistent PIH. For first-time peelers: start at 30% lactic (gentler than glycolic at any %) for 1-2 minutes. Build to higher concentrations and longer times over multiple sessions. For Fitzpatrick V-VI skin, mandelic 25-40% is preferred over glycolic regardless of percentage — the larger mandelic molecule penetrates less aggressively, dramatically reducing PIH risk. Never exceed manufacturer\'s recommended time, and always have neutralizer (baking soda solution for AHA) ready before applying.
Can I do a TCA peel at home?
No — TCA at 15%+ is a medium-depth peel that requires sterile clinical conditions, careful neutralization, and emergency response capability. Risks of DIY TCA: deep chemical burns, persistent PIH lasting months, scarring, infection requiring antibiotics, and rarely systemic toxicity. The retailers selling 15%+ TCA for "home use" are predatory — these products belong in dermatology offices, not bathrooms. For acne scars, melasma, or medium-depth concerns: see a board-certified dermatologist for in-office peels. Cost $200-600/session, 1-3 sessions typically. Significantly safer and more effective than any home approach for these concerns.
Will a chemical peel get rid of acne scars?
Home peels (superficial) help with PIH (post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, the dark marks left after acne) — 30-50% improvement over 4-6 sessions. They do NOT meaningfully help with atrophic scars (ice-pick, boxcar, rolling — the actual depressed scars). For atrophic scars, treatment needs to reach the dermis where the scar tissue is: medium-depth TCA peels (in-office), microneedling, RF microneedling, fractional laser, subcision, or TCA cross for ice-pick scars. Realistic improvement of atrophic scars with in-office treatment: 30-60% over 3-6 sessions. Realistic improvement with home peels alone on atrophic scars: 5-10%. PIH dark marks are very treatable at home; actual depressed scars need in-office treatment.