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DEFENSELockheed Martin Lands $35B THAAD Contract to Quadruple Missile ProductiontodayENERGYDOE's $17.5B in Federal Loans Is Reshaping the Nuclear Energy Investment CasetodayTECHTrump's Quantum Orders Set Hard Deadlines for Post-Quantum Cryptography — and Create a Compliance MarkettodayTECHTrump Administration Lifts Export Controls on Anthropic's Claude AI ModelstodayWHITE HOUSEU.S.-Iran Ceasefire Deal Signed, but White House Asks Congress for $87.6B to Cover the War's TabtodayHEALTHCARE & FDADOJ's $6.5B Healthcare Fraud Takedown Puts Medicare Advantage Billing Under a MicroscopetodayCRYPTOBitcoin ETF Outflows Top $4 Billion in June as Citi Cuts Its Price ForecasttodayTRADE & TARIFFSTrump Suspends Fertilizer Tariffs, Cutting Input Costs for U.S. FarmerstodayMARKETSSupreme Court Gives Trump Power to Fire FTC Commissioners, Sparing the FedtodayHEALTHCARE & FDAFDA Launches Safety Reassessment of BHT and ADA, Two Additives in Millions of Food Productstoday
Exfoliants

Glycolic Acid

Alpha hydroxy acid that chemically exfoliates and brightens skin.

Also known as: INCI: Glycolic Acid; AHA, hydroxyacetic acid, glycolate.

What it is
Glycolic acid is the smallest alpha hydroxy acid (AHA), derived from sugar cane. Its tiny molecular weight allows it to penetrate the stratum corneum and dissolve the bonds holding dead skin cells together.
What it does
It dissolves intercellular cement between dead skin cells, promoting gentle chemical exfoliation. This reveals fresher skin underneath, improves texture and radiance, reduces fine lines, and can help with hyperpigmentation and acne. Regular use also stimulates collagen remodeling and improves skin barrier function over time.
The evidence
Strong clinical evidence supports its efficacy for exfoliation, texture improvement, and mild anti-aging benefits at 5–15% concentrations. Moderate evidence exists for treating acne and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation; emerging evidence for collagen stimulation with chronic use.
Best for
Dull, congested, or textured skin; mild acne; post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation; and those seeking gentle chemical exfoliation without physical scrubbing.
Pairs well with
Niacinamide, hyaluronic acid, peptides, retinol (in separate AM/PM routines), and moisturizers to support barrier recovery.
Use cautiously with
Other strong exfoliants (salicylic acid, retinoids, vitamin C at high pH) in the same step; benzoyl peroxide can reduce efficacy. Use cautiously with hydroquinone or other sensitizing actives.
Cautions
Can cause irritation, redness, and photosensitivity, especially at high concentrations or low pH. Avoid during pregnancy without dermatologist approval. Always use SPF 30+ daily. Patch test first; start low and go slow.
General information, not medical advice. Ingredient effects vary by formulation, concentration, and skin. Patch-test new actives and consult a qualified provider before starting prescription ingredients.

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