What Causes Hormonal Acne, and What Actually Works to Treat It
You follow a consistent skincare routine, you've swapped out every pore-clogging product you own, and your skin still breaks out like clockwork every month. Sound familiar? If your acne seems to have a mind of its own, showing up along your jawline, chin, or lower cheeks right before your period, during a stressful stretch, or as you approach perimenopause, hormonal acne is likely the culprit.
The frustrating part: standard acne advice often misses the mark for hormonal breakouts because it doesn't address what's actually driving them. The encouraging part: once you understand the mechanism, you can choose targeted ingredients that work with your skin's changing needs rather than against them.
Let's break down what hormonal acne actually is, why it happens, and which ingredients dermatologists and skincare scientists point to as the most effective topical treatments.
What Is Hormonal Acne, Exactly?
Hormonal acne is a form of adult acne triggered by fluctuations in hormone levels, particularly androgens, that increase your skin's oil production, clog pores, and create the conditions for breakouts. It most commonly affects adults between their 20s and 50s, and it disproportionately impacts women during menstruation, pregnancy, perimenopause, and menopause.
Unlike the T-zone breakouts you might remember from adolescence, hormonal acne in adults tends to concentrate along the lower face. It also tends to be deeper and more inflammatory. Think painful, under-the-skin cysts rather than surface-level whiteheads.
What Causes Hormonal Acne?
At its core, hormonal acne starts with a shift in hormone levels that triggers excess sebum production. Here's the chain reaction:
Androgens spike. Androgens are a group of hormones (including testosterone) present in all genders. When androgen levels rise, which can happen during your menstrual cycle, pregnancy, menopause, or periods of high stress, your sebaceous glands kick into overdrive and produce more oil than your skin can manage.
Pores get clogged. That excess sebum mixes with dead skin cells and becomes trapped inside your pores, creating the perfect environment for blockages.
Bacteria and inflammation follow. Once a pore is clogged, acne-causing bacteria can multiply, triggering the redness, swelling, and deep painful bumps that characterize hormonal breakouts.
Stress compounds the cycle: elevated cortisol levels further stimulate oil production and inflammation, which is why a high-pressure week at work can coincide with your worst skin days.
Why Does Hormonal Acne Show Up on the Jawline and Chin?
The lower face, jawline, and neck have a higher concentration of androgen-sensitive oil glands compared to other areas. When hormone levels shift, these glands respond more dramatically, which is why hormonal acne so consistently appears in the same zones, even when the rest of your face is relatively clear.
How to Tell If Your Acne Is Hormonal
Not all adult acne is hormonal, but there are a few reliable patterns to watch for:
- It's cyclical. Your breakouts consistently appear at the same point in your menstrual cycle, typically in the days leading up to your period.
- It's concentrated on your lower face. Jawline, chin, lower cheeks, and sometimes the neck and chest.
- It's deep and cystic. Hormonal breakouts often present as painful, under-the-skin bumps rather than surface-level pimples.
- It started or worsened in adulthood. Many people with hormonal acne had relatively clear skin as teenagers but started breaking out in their 20s, 30s, or beyond.
- Standard acne treatments haven't fully worked. If over-the-counter benzoyl peroxide and basic salicylic acid washes haven't cleared your skin, hormonal factors may be at play.
If these signs sound like you, the next step is choosing ingredients that address the specific mechanisms behind hormonal breakouts (excess oil, clogged pores, inflammation, and post-acne discoloration) simultaneously.
The Best Ingredients for Hormonal Acne Treatment
Most conventional acne products focus on a single mechanism: either clearing pores or killing bacteria or reducing oil. But hormonal acne is multifactorial, which is why a multi-acid approach, using complementary acids that each target a different piece of the puzzle, tends to deliver better results than any one ingredient alone.
Three acids in particular stand out for their combined ability to address hormonal breakouts from multiple angles: azelaic acid, salicylic acid, and mandelic acid.
Azelaic Acid: The Brightener That Fights Breakouts
Azelaic acid is a naturally derived dicarboxylic acid with antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, and skin-brightening properties. It's been used in dermatology for decades to treat mild to moderate acne, and clinical reviews have found its efficacy comparable to topical retinoids and benzoyl peroxide for reducing acne lesions.
What makes azelaic acid especially useful for hormonal acne is its ability to multitask. It helps reduce the redness and swelling that accompany inflammatory breakouts while also acting as a tyrosinase inhibitor, meaning it can fade the dark spots and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation that hormonal acne often leaves behind. It's also well-tolerated by sensitive skin and safe to use during pregnancy, which makes it a standout option when other actives (like retinoids) are off the table.
Salicylic Acid: The Pore-Clearing BHA
Salicylic acid is a beta-hydroxy acid (BHA) derived from willow bark. Unlike water-soluble AHAs, salicylic acid is oil-soluble, which means it can penetrate into pores to dissolve the mixture of sebum and dead skin cells that forms the foundation of acne breakouts.
For hormonal acne, this is critical: when excess androgen-driven oil production is the root cause, you need an ingredient that can get inside the pore and clear it from within, not just exfoliate the surface. Salicylic acid also has anti-inflammatory properties, which help calm the redness and swelling of active breakouts.
Mandelic Acid: The Gentle AHA
Mandelic acid is an alpha-hydroxy acid (AHA) derived from bitter almonds. Its standout feature is its larger molecular structure compared to other AHAs like glycolic acid. This means it penetrates the skin more slowly and evenly, making it significantly less likely to cause irritation.
For people with hormonal acne who also deal with sensitivity, uneven skin tone, or post-acne marks, mandelic acid offers gentle surface exfoliation alongside antibacterial benefits. Research has noted that mandelic acid is particularly suitable for darker skin tones, which are more prone to rebound pigmentation from aggressive exfoliants.
Why These Three Work Better Together
Each of these acids targets a different layer of the hormonal acne problem: salicylic acid clears pores from within, mandelic acid exfoliates the surface and supports cell turnover, and azelaic acid calms inflammation while brightening discoloration. Together, they cover the full lifecycle of a hormonal breakout, from the clogged pore that starts it to the dark mark it leaves behind.
This is exactly the approach behind the Skin Rhythm™ Balancing & Clearing Serum, which combines all three acids in what Volition Beauty calls the "Acid Trio." Co-developed with board-certified OB-GYN Dr. Jacqueline Walters, the serum was formulated specifically to address skin changes driven by hormonal imbalance. In an independent clinical study of 29 women (ages 25 to 65) who used the serum twice daily, 96% reported visible clearing of skin imperfections and 93% reported balancing of excess oil in just four weeks.*
*Individual results may vary.
Shop Skin Rhythm™ Balancing & Clearing Serum
Building a Skincare Routine for Hormonal Acne
A hormonal acne routine doesn't need to be complicated, but it does need to be consistent. The general rule is to keep it gentle. Overly aggressive topicals can strip the skin's barrier, trigger more oil production, and make hormonal breakouts worse.
Here's a straightforward framework:
Morning: Cleanse with a gentle, pH-balanced cleanser → apply your treatment serum → follow with a lightweight, non-comedogenic moisturizer → finish with broad-spectrum SPF (essential for preventing post-acne dark spots from worsening).
Evening: Cleanse again to remove sunscreen, makeup, and the day's oil buildup → apply your treatment serum → moisturize.
The Skin Rhythm™ Balancing & Clearing Cleanser pairs with the serum and includes salicylic acid, niacinamide, and bakuchiol (a naturally derived retinol alternative) to prep the skin for treatment without over-stripping.
A few practical tips:
- Use a pea-sized amount of serum. More product doesn't mean faster results. It means more potential for irritation.
- Apply with clean hands or a tool. The Hormonal Acne Heroes bundle includes a reusable face sculptor for hygienic, hands-free application, which helps avoid transferring bacteria from your fingers to breakout-prone areas.
- Give it time. Expect four to six weeks of consistent use before evaluating results. Even if you don't see visible improvement immediately, continuing treatment helps prevent new breakouts from forming.
Look for supporting ingredients like niacinamide (which controls oil, helps diminish the appearance of acne scars, and reinforces the skin barrier) and CoQ10 (an antioxidant that strengthens the skin's barrier function and helps neutralize free radicals). Both are included in the Skin Rhythm™ Serum formula.
Get the full routine with the Hormonal Acne Heroes bundle at 30% off
Lifestyle Factors That Can Make Hormonal Acne Worse
Topical treatment is one part of the equation. A few lifestyle factors are worth paying attention to, not as magic fixes, but as contributors that can tip the scales:
Diet. Some dermatological research suggests that high-glycemic foods (refined carbs, sugary snacks) and dairy, particularly low-fat dairy, may influence hormone levels like insulin and testosterone in ways that worsen acne. Reducing these foods isn't guaranteed to clear your skin, but many people notice improvement.
Stress. Cortisol, your body's primary stress hormone, directly stimulates sebum production. Chronic stress can create a frustrating feedback loop where breakouts cause more stress, which causes more breakouts. Prioritizing sleep, movement, and whatever stress management works for you can meaningfully support your skin.
Pore-clogging products. Check your moisturizer, sunscreen, foundation, and even hair products for comedogenic ingredients. Switching to non-comedogenic, oil-free formulas can reduce the baseline pore congestion that hormonal fluctuations then push over the edge.
When to See a Dermatologist
Topical skincare can make a significant difference for mild to moderate hormonal acne, but there are situations where professional guidance is important:
- Your acne is severely cystic, painful, or leaving scars.
- You've used a consistent topical routine for 8 to 12 weeks with no improvement.
- Your breakouts are accompanied by other symptoms like irregular periods, unexplained weight changes, or excess hair growth, which could indicate an underlying hormonal condition like PCOS.
- You're considering prescription options like spironolactone, oral contraceptives, or retinoids.
We're a skincare brand, not a substitute for medical advice. If you're unsure whether your acne is hormonal or something else, a board-certified dermatologist can help you get clarity and potentially uncover root causes that topical products alone can't address.
FAQ
Q: Can hormonal acne go away on its own? A: It can fluctuate with life stages (some people see improvement after pregnancy or as they move through menopause), but it rarely resolves completely without some form of treatment. Because hormonal acne is driven by internal factors, a consistent skincare routine with targeted ingredients is typically needed to manage it long-term.
Q: Is hormonal acne the same as adult acne? A: They're closely related but not identical. "Adult acne" is a broad term for any acne that persists or begins after adolescence. Hormonal acne is a specific type of adult acne that's directly triggered by hormone fluctuations. Most adult acne in women has a hormonal component, but not all adult acne is exclusively hormone-driven.
Q: Can you use azelaic acid and salicylic acid together? A: Yes, and in fact, they complement each other well. Salicylic acid works inside the pore to clear blockages while azelaic acid addresses inflammation and post-acne discoloration on the surface. Using them in a single, pH-balanced formula (like the Skin Rhythm™ Serum, which also includes mandelic acid) can be more effective than layering separate products, and reduces the risk of irritation from mismatched pH levels.
Q: How long does it take for hormonal acne treatments to work? A: Most dermatologists recommend giving a new topical routine at least four to six weeks before expecting visible results. Some treatments can take eight to sixteen weeks to reach full effectiveness. Consistency is key: even if you don't see surface-level changes right away, the ingredients are working to prevent new breakouts from forming beneath the skin