How to use baking soda to remove dark spots, wrinkles and fine lines from your face

Baking Soda for Dark Spots, Wrinkles, and Fine Lines: What You Should Know

Baking soda is often promoted online as a “natural skin remedy,” but there is no strong scientific evidence that baking soda can remove dark spots, wrinkles, or fine lines. In fact, using it on your face may do more harm than good for some people.

Why baking soda may be risky for facial skin

  • Baking soda is alkaline, while healthy skin is naturally slightly acidic. Frequent use may disrupt the skin barrier.
  • It can cause dryness, irritation, redness, or sensitivity, especially on mature or sensitive skin.
  • Scrubbing with baking soda can worsen irritation and may make some dark spots appear more noticeable.

Safer ways to support smoother, brighter-looking skin

For dark spots:

  • Use daily broad-spectrum sunscreen (SPF 30+) to prevent spots from getting darker.
  • Ingredients such as vitamin C, niacinamide, azelaic acid, or retinoids may help improve uneven skin tone over time.

For fine lines and wrinkles:

  • Moisturizers with ingredients like hyaluronic acid, glycerin, and ceramides can help skin look more hydrated.
  • Retinoids (such as retinol products) have evidence for improving skin texture with consistent use.
  • Sun protection is one of the most important steps for preventing further collagen breakdown.

If you still want to try baking soda

It is better used for household cleaning rather than facial skincare. If you apply any new product to your skin, test it on a small area first and stop if irritation occurs.

If you’re looking for a simple routine for mature skin, dark spots, or wrinkles, I can suggest one using gentle, evidence-based ingredients.

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