Acne, held.
Body-first active care for breakouts, texture, and confidence — calmed by the rituals you already trust.
of users saw a visible reduction in active breakouts after four weeks of consistent use.
n = 142 · independent third-party study · 2025What is your skin asking for?
See all →Name what you see today. We will route you to the actives that meet it.
The Reset Protocol
The four-step TLC sequence for a first-time active user. Tap to move between morning, night, and body.
The hero eight
View all 25 →Most-reached-for in TLC active routines. Begin here if you do not know where to begin.
What's actually working
What changed, measured
Before you start
Can I use salicylic and niacinamide together?
Yes — and we recommend it. Salicylic clears the pore in the morning, niacinamide calms the post-active redness. They're a classic stack, not a conflict.
How long until I see results?
Most users see visible reduction in active breakouts at the 4-week mark. Pigmentation and scar work takes 8–12 weeks. Acne is a cycle — give the protocol one full skin cycle (28 days) before judging.
Will actives make me peel?
Some shedding in the first 7–10 days is normal as your skin clears trapped congestion. If you feel raw, drop frequency to alternate nights and double down on Skin Lock moisturiser.
Is this safe in pregnancy?
Skip retinaldehyde and salicylic at higher concentrations. Azelaic acid and niacinamide are commonly discussed with an OB-GYN during pregnancy — message us and we'll build you a conservative protocol.
"Three weeks in and my forehead is quiet for the first time in years."
"Skin that works for you.
Science that works with it."
Acne care — questions answered
The TLC acne range is built around three primary actives: Salicylic Acid (BHA) — exfoliates inside the pore to dissolve blackheads and whiteheads; Niacinamide — reduces sebum production and redness; AHA (Glycolic or Lactic Acid) — resurfaces skin texture and post-acne marks. Products in this collection combine these actives at effective concentrations tested for body skin use.
Yes — the TLC acne range is formulated specifically for body skin, which is thicker and more resilient than facial skin. The body wash and spray formats make them easy to apply to the back and chest. For hard-to-reach areas like the upper back, the bacne spray format is especially useful — spray directly onto the area without needing to work it in with hands.
TLC acne products use Salicylic Acid at concentrations formulated for leave-on and rinse-off body use — typically 0.5–2% depending on the product format. The body wash is a rinse-off product at a higher concentration; leave-on products (sprays, lotions) are at the lower end to prevent irritation with daily use. Full concentration details are on each product label.
Improvement in active breakouts typically begins within 1–2 weeks of consistent daily use. Significant texture improvement and reduction in post-acne marks takes consistent use. Stubborn hyperpigmentation (dark marks after breakouts) can take routine-led use to visibly fade. Consistency is the most important factor — daily use outperforms sporadic higher-quantity use.
If you are using prescription topicals (retinoids, benzoyl peroxide, topical antibiotics), check with your dermatologist before adding TLC actives. Layering multiple exfoliating acids or combining with retinoids can cause irritation. The TLC body wash (rinse-off) is generally lower-risk to add alongside prescriptions than leave-on products. When in doubt, introduce one product at a time and monitor skin response.
The TLC acne range contains active exfoliants that may cause sensitivity in some people, particularly those new to acids. Start with the body wash (lowest exposure time) before moving to leave-on formats. If you have very sensitive or reactive skin, start with 3×/week use rather than daily, and do not combine with other exfoliating products in the same routine. All products are paraben-free and SLS-free.
No — the actives in TLC acne products (Salicylic Acid, Niacinamide, AHA) are not bleaching agents. Niacinamide can reduce hyperpigmentation (post-acne dark marks) by inhibiting melanin transfer — which lightens existing marks, not the surrounding normal skin. They will not cause white patches or depigmentation. Use SPF daily when using AHA/BHA products, as acids increase UV sensitivity.
Yes — daily SPF is essential when using any AHA or BHA active. These acids increase the skin's photosensitivity by removing the outermost dead cell layer. Unprotected sun exposure while using acids will cause redness, burning, and accelerated pigmentation. Apply a broad-spectrum SPF 30+ every morning as the final step in your routine, even on cloudy or indoor days.
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Active body care, built with clarity. Body-first formulas with disclosed key actives, usage guidance, and routines for visible concerns.
ACTIVES THAT ACTUALLY WORK
ACTIVE+ formulas are built around visible body concerns and disclose the key actives on each product page. Check the live product page for exact percentages, directions, and suitability.
HOW TO USE CONSISTENTLY
Check each product page for its ingredient list, usage directions and active ingredients. If your skin is sensitive or you are avoiding specific ingredients, patch test before first use.
HOW TO LAYER ACTIVES
Order: cleanser → toner → serum → moisturizer → SPF. Never layer salicylic with retinol on the same night. Vitamin C in the morning, retinol at night. Read our active layering guide.
RESULTS TIMELINE
Week 1 — skin feels calmer. Week 4 — texture smooths, pores look smaller. Week 8 — pigmentation starts to fade. Week 12 — visible glow. Consistency matters more than the product.
WHEN TO SEE A DERMATOLOGIST
If a concern persists past 8 weeks of consistent use, or you have a recurring condition like cystic acne or melasma, please consult a dermatologist. TLC actives complement medical treatment but don't replace it.





