How to Patch Test a New Product

Deciding whether or not a product works for you is obviously an important part of establishing a routine. Before you can figure out if it will help improve your skin, you need to be certain it won’t cause an allergic reaction or make skin worse. The best and safest way to do this is to follow a process called patch testing.

Skincare is a very YMMV journey. Don’t be afraid to play around with your testing schedule!

Patch testing can feel very tedious, but if you’re someone with sensitive or picky skin, it can save you a lot of time and headache in the long run. It involves testing a bit of product on other, sensitive areas of skin before using them on your full face. Patch testing can also be helpful if your skin is having a bad reaction but you aren’t sure which product or specific ingredient is causing the problem.

Remember, the timeline I’m going to lay out in the steps below isn’t law! The amount of time you need to take with each step of the process is totally dependent on your skin. The steps I’m going to outline for you are general guidelines that work for a majority of people, but don’t be afraid to play around with them to find what fits for you.

What to Look For

You may not have ever experienced a bad reaction to a beauty product, so you may not know how to tell if what you’re seeing is a product reaction.

Of course, everyone’s skin is different, so pay attention to how yours looks and feels, but these signs generally mean your skin isn’t happy with a new product:

Warning Signs

  • Tightness or redness
  • Tiny white bumps under the surface of your skin
  • Painful, cystic breakouts
  • Unusually clogged pores
  • Burning or itching during or after application (even uncomfortable warmth counts here)

If you feel burning, itching or tightness after application, usually you can gently rinse the product off of your skin right away.

If you experience any kind of bumps or breakouts, this is not purging. Let me repeat: Bad reaction. Not purging. Purging only happens when you are using AHA, BHA, vitamin C or some form of retinol. Anything else is just your skin being mad.

Step One: Inner Elbow

Before you put any products on your face, you should apply them to an inconspicuous area that is more sensitive than most of your other body skin. For me, the best and easiest place to start is the skin on the inside of my elbow. Places like the inside of your elbow, the back of your knee or even the inside of your wrist tend to have thinner, more sensitive skin that is similar to the skin of your face.

This means if you’re going to have any kind of allergic reaction, using the product on skin that’s similar to your delicate face skin (but not your face!) can help you avoid triggering a nasty reaction on your face. After all, it’s much easier to cover up itchy, angry red spots on your body than on your face!

If you don’t have very sensitive skin, usually patch testing for 2-3 days in a row is plenty of time to gauge how your skin will react. If you have concerns about the ingredients or if your skin tends to have problems, you may want to stretch your testing to 5-7 days.

Step Two: Behind the Ear

So, once you’ve made it through the first stage, it’s time to move on to the second. I know you’re probably thinking, “Seriously? Another step?” Testing behind your ear is as close to your face as you can get while still being inconspicuous in case it goes badly.

This step works exactly the same as the first, but you typically don’t need to take as long for testing. Usually you will know within a day or two if your skin can tolerate the product. If not, you’ll notice redness, itching, hives or closed comedones.

Step Three: The Split-Face Test

If you don’t have particularly sensitive skin and/or you just like living dangerously (YOLO amirite), you can skip the split-face all together and just go ahead and slather whatever it is all over your face. You made it through two steps, right? Good enough.

I usually don’t go this far in my patch testing simply because I’m very impatient and I have pretty non-reactive skin. If you have sensitive skin or you’re just starting out, DO AS I SAY, NOT AS I DO!

Keep testing.

Split-face is pretty straightforward. Typically, you’ll vertically divide your face and apply product to one side, but not the other. Alternatively, if you know that certain parts of your face tend to be more sensitive – for me, if I ever have a reaction it’s always around my cheekbones – you can just test on those parts of your face instead. Do what works for you.

This part of testing is generally also only a day or two for me. By now, if you haven’t had a seriously bad reaction, you most likely aren’t going to.

Step Four: Enjoy!

If you’ve made it this far without any crazy skin catastrophes, you’re free to add the product into your routine. I like to wait at least a few days and up to a week before I start testing a new product, just to give my skin a break.

If you have any patch testing tips or tricks I didn’t mention, leave me a comment below and share your wisdom!

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