That claim is misleading. Baking soda does not safely remove dark spots, wrinkles, or dark circles from the face, and using it regularly can actually damage skin.
Baking soda is alkaline, while human skin is naturally slightly acidic. Putting baking soda on the face can disrupt the skin barrier.
⚠️ Why baking soda is NOT a good skincare treatment
It can:
- Strip natural oils from the skin
- Cause dryness and irritation
- Disrupt the skin’s protective barrier
- Make dark spots or sensitivity worse over time
- Trigger redness or burning, especially on delicate areas like under the eyes
🧴 What actually works for these skin concerns
🌑 Dark spots (hyperpigmentation)
- Sunscreen (most important step)
- Vitamin C serums
- Niacinamide
- Retinoids (under dermatologist guidance)
👁️ Dark circles
Depends on cause:
- Lack of sleep → sleep improvement
- Genetics → limited topical effect
- Thin skin → caffeine creams or retinoids
- Allergies → treating the allergy helps most
🧓 Wrinkles
- Sunscreen daily (prevents worsening)
- Retinoids (most evidence-backed topical treatment)
- Moisturizers with hyaluronic acid
- Healthy lifestyle (sleep, hydration, no smoking)
🚫 Why baking soda “beauty hacks” go viral
They:
- Look simple and cheap
- Promise fast results
- Ignore long-term skin damage
But dermatologists generally do not recommend baking soda on the face.
🧠 Bottom line
Baking soda is useful for cleaning, but not a safe or effective skincare treatment for dark spots, wrinkles, or under-eye circles.
If you want, I can suggest:
- A simple skincare routine for glowing skin
- Safe home remedies that actually have evidence
- Or budget-friendly products for dark spots and wrinkles 👍
