Recipe

How to use baking soda to help reduce the appearance of dark spots, wrinkles, and under-eye circles.

Baking soda gets mentioned a lot in skincare “hacks,” but it’s important to be clear upfront: it is not a recommended treatment for dark spots, wrinkles, or under-eye circles, and dermatologists generally advise against using it on the face.

Why baking soda is risky for skin

Baking soda is highly alkaline (much higher pH than skin). Your skin barrier is slightly acidic, and disrupting it can lead to:

  • Irritation and redness
  • Dryness and flaking
  • Increased sensitivity
  • Worsening pigmentation over time
  • Breakouts or inflammation

So instead of improving dark spots or wrinkles, it can actually make them more noticeable.


What people claim vs reality

1. Dark spots (hyperpigmentation)

Claim: Baking soda “lightens” skin
Reality: It may temporarily exfoliate the surface, but it does not safely treat pigmentation and can worsen irritation-related darkening.

A better approach is using ingredients like:

  • Vitamin C
  • Niacinamide
  • Sunscreen (most important)

2. Wrinkles

Claim: Baking soda smooths fine lines
Reality: Any “smoothing” effect is temporary from irritation and skin dehydration—not real wrinkle improvement.

More effective options include:

  • Retinoids (like retinol)
  • Hydration (hyaluronic acid)
  • Sun protection

3. Under-eye circles

Claim: Baking soda reduces darkness
Reality: Under-eye circles are usually caused by:

  • Genetics
  • Thin skin
  • Blood vessel visibility
  • Lack of sleep or allergies

Baking soda does not address any of these causes and may irritate the delicate skin under the eyes.


If you still see baking soda “DIY masks” online

Some viral recipes suggest mixing baking soda with water or honey as a face mask or scrub. These are not safe for regular facial use, especially around the eyes.

If used at all (not recommended by dermatologists), it would be extremely occasional and still carries risk of irritation.


Safer, proven alternatives

If your goal is improvement of skin tone and texture:

  • Dark spots: sunscreen + vitamin C + niacinamide
  • Wrinkles: retinol + moisturizer + sun protection
  • Under-eye circles: sleep, allergy control, caffeine eye creams, gentle skincare

And the single most important step for all three:

Daily sunscreen use


Bottom line

Baking soda is a household cleaning product—not a skincare treatment. While it may appear in viral “beauty hacks,” it is more likely to damage skin than improve it, especially on the face.


If you want, I can turn this into a “viral myth vs fact” article or suggest a simple skincare routine that actually targets dark spots and wrinkles safely.

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