Alpha hydroxy acids (AHA)
Glycolic acid
INCI: Glycolic Acid · AHA
Can improve texture and the appearance of fine lines, but it adds irritation load rather than replacing a retinoid.
What it is best suited for
Can improve texture and the appearance of fine lines, but it adds irritation load rather than replacing a retinoid.
Can improve surface tone and texture, but higher irritation makes it a poor first choice for some pigment-prone skin.
What result is realistic
A realistic improvement is possible with consistent use, but response varies by formula and context.
- Initial change
- Several weeks
- When to evaluate
- About 8–12 weeks
- Expected benefit
- Modest
What it is and what we know
A small-molecule exfoliating acid used for texture and uneven tone, with meaningful irritation potential.
Its usefulness depends on the goal, vehicle, concentration context, frequency, and the rest of the routine.
Who may find it irritating
Irritation potential: High. Formula, frequency, and barrier condition change tolerability.
No special restriction is modeled here, but individual products and circumstances still matter. The ingredient may increase irritation or sun vulnerability in context. Daily broad-spectrum protection remains important.
How a beginner can introduce it
Introduce slowly and change one active at a time.
Useful concentration depends on the ingredient form and complete formula. Ingredient order alone cannot establish a studied concentration.
What not to expect
No single ingredient guarantees a result or compensates for an irritating, inconsistent routine.
Ingredient evidence does not guarantee that every product formula performs equally.
What may duplicate it
Alpha hydroxy acids (AHA) is its functional family. Several products from this family can repeat the same role, especially when they are irritation-prone.
Same family: Lactic acid · Mandelic acid.
Compatibility in context
The main issue is cumulative irritation, not a dangerous chemical reaction. Start one first, reduce frequency, or use on different nights.
Verified products containing it
No verified product yet
TIER does not recommend a formula without an official source. Compare the next-ranked ingredient while the verified catalogue grows.
View the next alternative →Evidence and uncertainty
Editorial preview. Complete source lists and clinical review are not yet published. TIER therefore avoids “best” claims and does not show a public numeric score.
Fine lines · Moderate
- Evidence certainty
- Moderate
- Editorial confidence
- Medium
- Published sources
- 0
- Status
- Editorial preview
- Last reviewed
- 2026-07-14
The priority score combines evidence confidence, expected benefit, tolerability, practicality, time, and relative cost. It is not an efficacy percentage.
Important uncertainty: Ingredient evidence does not guarantee that every product formula performs equally.
Dark spots · Moderate
- Evidence certainty
- Moderate
- Editorial confidence
- Medium
- Published sources
- 0
- Status
- Editorial preview
- Last reviewed
- 2026-07-14
The priority score combines evidence confidence, expected benefit, tolerability, practicality, time, and relative cost. It is not an efficacy percentage.
Important uncertainty: Ingredient evidence does not guarantee that every product formula performs equally.
Next best alternative
Tretinoin is the next-ranked option for Fine lines. Compare it before adding another active.
Compare alternatives