---
title: Clogged Pores
entity_type: Concern
canonical_url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/concerns/clogged-pores
date_modified: 2026-05-30
date_reviewed: 2026-05-30
mcp_eligible: true
summary: Clogged Pores skincare reference with cosmetic-appearance context, cited sources, and practical routine boundaries for readers.
ranked_products:
  - title: Paula's Choice Skin Perfecting 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant
    url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/products/paulas-choice-2-bha-liquid-exfoliant
ranked_product:
  title: Paula's Choice Skin Perfecting 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant
  url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/products/paulas-choice-2-bha-liquid-exfoliant
key_ingredients:
  - title: Salicylic Acid
    url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/salicylic-acid
  - title: Adapalene
    url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/adapalene
  - title: Niacinamide
    url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/niacinamide
evidence_sources: []
product_fact_sources:
  - title: Official Product Page — Paula's Choice 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant
    canonical_citation_url: https://skinknowledgebase.com/sources/official-product-page-paulas-choice-2-bha-liquid-exfoliant
    original_source_url: https://www.paulaschoice.com/skin-perfecting-2pct-bha-liquid-exfoliant/201.html
    source_type: official_product_page
---

# Clogged Pores

## Quick Summary

Clogged Pores describes a visible or comfort-related skincare concern. It matters in routine-combination questions because the same active ingredients that help acne, tone, texture, or wrinkles can make skin look worse when used too often.

## What It Is

Clogged Pores is an appearance and comfort signal, not a challenge to push through. The skin may feel tight, sting with ordinary products, show new flakes, look unusually shiny, or develop redness and bumps after an active-heavy routine.

In many routines, the concern is not one ingredient by itself. It is the total load: cleanser strength, retinoid frequency, acids, benzoyl peroxide, weather, shaving, and not enough moisturizer.

## Causes

Common contributors include strong active combinations, rapid frequency increases, harsh cleansing, fragrance, alcohol-heavy formulas, acne treatments used over large areas, and inadequate moisturizer. Retinoids, exfoliating acids, and benzoyl peroxide can all be useful, but they need pacing.

Sun exposure can worsen the appearance of irritated or recently exfoliated skin, especially when dark spots or uneven tone are part of the concern.

## How cosmetic skincare can help

The first step is usually simplification: gentle cleanser, moisturizer, sunscreen for exposed skin, and a pause or lower frequency for the irritating active. Ceramides, glycerin, petrolatum, hyaluronic acid, panthenol, and niacinamide can support comfort while the routine resets.

Once skin is calm, reintroduce one active at a time. Keep retinoids and exfoliating acids on alternate nights if irritation returns. Use benzoyl peroxide carefully because it can dry skin and bleach fabrics.

## Product Handling

Products linked to this concern are examples of roles: a moisturizer, hydrating serum, acne treatment, sunscreen, or targeted active. They do not make an aggressive routine safe by themselves.

If no product belongs, the reason is safety. Irritated skin often needs fewer actives, not a more complicated product stack. A useful reset is two weeks of gentle cleanser, moisturizer, sunscreen when exposed, and no exfoliating acids or retinoids until ordinary products stop stinging. After that, reintroduce only one active and keep the frequency low.

People with acne-prone skin should also avoid swinging from irritation into heavy occlusion everywhere. Use richer balms only on dry patches if they worsen breakouts. The goal is skin that feels normal enough to tolerate a targeted treatment, not skin that is coated but still inflamed underneath.

## Limits And Safety

Stop active products and seek medical guidance for swelling, oozing, severe burning, eye-area irritation, hives, worsening rash, painful cysts, or symptoms that persist after simplifying the routine. If you are pregnant or trying to conceive, avoid retinoids unless your clinician advises otherwise.

## Related Entities

- [Salicylic Acid](https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/salicylic-acid)
- [Adapalene](https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/adapalene)
- [Niacinamide](https://skinknowledgebase.com/ingredients/niacinamide)
- [How do I get rid of clogged pores on my cheeks?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/how-do-i-get-rid-of-clogged-pores-on-my-cheeks)
- [Paula's Choice Skin Perfecting 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant](https://skinknowledgebase.com/products/paulas-choice-2-bha-liquid-exfoliant)
- [What causes milia under my eyes?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/what-causes-milia-under-my-eyes)
- [Can hair products cause acne around my hairline?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/can-hair-products-cause-acne-around-my-hairline)
- [Can sunscreen cause breakouts?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/can-sunscreen-cause-breakouts)
- [How do I tell if a product is breaking me out?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/how-do-i-tell-if-a-product-is-breaking-me-out)
- [How do I get rid of texture on my face?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/how-do-i-get-rid-of-texture-on-my-face)
- [How do I treat blackheads without stripping my skin?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/how-do-i-treat-blackheads-without-stripping-my-skin)
- [How do I get rid of whiteheads on my chin?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/how-do-i-get-rid-of-whiteheads-on-my-chin)
- [Can I use azelaic acid with salicylic acid?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/can-i-use-azelaic-acid-with-salicylic-acid)
- [Can I use salicylic acid with retinol?](https://skinknowledgebase.com/questions/can-i-use-salicylic-acid-with-retinol)
