The skincare industry continues to evolve rapidly, with new ingredients, techniques, and philosophies emerging each year. While 2025 championed ‘skinimalism’ (fewer, multi-tasking products for efficient routines), barrier focus, and early anti-ageing, 2026 is set to usher in a more intentional and intelligent approach to skincare.
What are the skincare trends in 2026?
HT HealthShots spoke with dermatologists to understand the skincare trends that might rule in 2026 and the ones you should bid adieu to in 2025.
1. Skin barrier care takes centre stage
One of the strongest trends emerging in 2026 is barrier-first skincare. Dermatologists and consumers alike are moving away from aggressive exfoliation and harsh actives, favouring gentle routines that protect and repair the skin barrier. “Skincare, in 2026, will stop chasing perfection and will focus more on understanding your skin “, says Dermatologist, Dr Sapana Kamlani, Jupiter Hospital.”
Consultant Dermatologist, Dr Harsimran Kaur of Kaya Limited, also notes, “Looking ahead, skincare in 2026 is certainly expected to move beyond instant fixes and quick glow tricks towards long-term skin health and prevention.” According to Dr Kamlani, “Simple regimens with mild cleansers, ceramides, lipids, and barrier-repair ingredients are becoming the norm. Over-exfoliation and complicated multi-step routines that compromise skin health are gradually losing popularity.”
Dr Kaur seconds this thought, noting, “Barrier-focused formulations using ceramides and gentle actives are replacing harsh exfoliation-driven routines, creating healthier, more resilient skin over time.” Dr Madhuri Agarwal, Founder and Medical Director, Yavana Skin & Hair Clinics, says, “The bathroom counter of 2026 looks different. The cluttered 10-step routines that stripped our barriers would be replaced by ‘Skinimalism.’
2. Personalised skincare powered by AI and science
Dr Kamlani predicts that another key shift: the rise of personalised skincare, enabled by AI. “The era of ‘one-size-fits-all’ skincare is rapidly becoming outdated. In 2026, personalised skincare, driven by AI diagnostics and dermatologist guidance, might dominate”, she asserts. AI-powered skin analysis tools will become essential for creating precise, customised routines that adapt to changing skin needs. Considering this, skin routines will increasingly be tailored to an individual’s age, hormonal profile, lifestyle, stress levels, and climate and environmental exposure.
3. Holistic skin health: Beauty from within
Skin health in 2026 would be viewed as a holistic ecosystem, where topical products and internal wellness work together.
“Nutrition, gut health, sleep quality, and stress management would be considered just as important as serums and moisturisers. As a result, supplements and skincare would align into one integrated conversation, rather than existing as separate categories”, Dr Kamlani reiterates.
“Good skin is about health, not hype,” notes Dr Kamlani, highlighting the growing awareness that glowing skin begins from within.
4. Science-backed and transparent formulations
Consumers are becoming more informed and selective. “In 2026, skincare choices will be driven by ingredient efficacy, clinical validation, and transparency, rather than flashy claims”, says Dr Kamlani. She further predicts that consumers will read the labels carefully and choose products with effective ingredients. Antioxidants, peptides, ceramides, niacinamide, and growth factors are gaining prominence for their proven benefits. “Transparency will matter more than marketing,” says Dr Kamlani, reflecting a broader shift toward evidence-based skincare.
5. Preventive and regenerative skincare
Regenerative skincare is also gaining momentum. Preventive ageing, rather than corrective treatments, is becoming the new benchmark. MMsSharmila Shetty, National Creative Director, Lakme Salon, explains,”Skincare is evolving from correcting visible damage to preventing it early by strengthening cellular health and supporting skin longevity. ” This trend includes advanced antioxidants and peptides, barrier-repair actives, pro-retinol complexes and niacinamide.
According to Dr Kaur, “Ingredients such as peptides, growth-factor-based actives, and exosome-inspired technologies work at a cellular level to improve skin quality naturally.” According to Dr Agarwal, “Dermatology is entering the era of regenerative architecture. Treatments are no longer about surface camouflage, but about restoring the skin’s internal structure using signalling molecules like exosomes and biostimulators.”
6. Rise of advanced In-clinic treatments
In-clinic dermatological treatments are playing a bigger role in long-term skin health. Dr Kaur says, “I have seen how in-clinic treatments, like microneedling, radiofrequency microneedling, PRP, and light-based therapies draw interest.” She further asserts that these treatments trigger the body to produce collagen naturally and deliver results that last longer. Ms Shetty adds, “Technologies like nano-needling are increasingly being integrated into professional treatments to enable deeper penetration of actives and enhanced efficacy, while remaining minimally invasive. ”
7. From ‘anti-ageing’ to ‘well-ageing’
The narrative is shifting away from ‘anti-ageing’ toward ‘well-ageing.’ Dr Kamlani says, “Age-inclusive skincare will become the norm. This will move the focus away, from ‘anti-ageing’ to well ageing’, encouraging people to take care of their skin at every age without the pressure to look younger.”
Dr Kaur affirms, “People today are aware that maintaining healthy skin in their 20s and 30s can go a long way in delaying the signs of ageing. They are choosing routines and individualised treatments that protect collagen, strengthen the skin barrier and help repair natural repair process instead of waiting for the appearance of fine lines and age spots.” This approach focuses on maintaining skin health, preserving collagen, strengthening the barrier, and supporting natural repair processes.
8. Neurocosmetics and Stress-Responsive Skincare
Modern life, especially in urban environments, has made stress a primary skin concern. Dr Agarwal highlights the rise of neurocosmetics, products designed to calm stress responses directly at the skin level.”These formulations work by blocking stress hormones like cortisol at skin receptor sites, reinforcing the connection between mental well being and skin health”, she quotes.
9. Focus would be on sun protection and the eye area
Sun protection and skin cancer prevention are essential parts of the skincare routine. “Use of broad-spectrum SPF, protective clothing and regular skin checks is no longer optional but a necessity”, mentions Dr Kaur. She further emphasises the need to prioritise under-eye care, with a focus on innovative, targeted treatments that address dark circles, fine lines, and thin skin more effectively than before.
Conclusion
Skincare in 2026 will focus on minimal product experimentation and greater product understanding. The cluttered 10-step routines are being replaced by skinimalism and a rise in AI and science-backed skincare. However, people are not bothered by looking young; they are bothered by looking well! As Dr Kamlani aptly puts it, this evolution is worth celebrating because good skin is about health, balance, and understanding, not just hype.