Dark Circles Don’t Have One Cause
If you’ve tried several eye creams and seen little improvement, it’s often because the product’s ingredients don’t match your type of dark circle. There are three distinct types, each with different underlying causes and different effective treatments.
The Three Types: Diagnosis First
Pigmented Type (Melanin-Driven)
Brown or greyish-brown discoloration. When you gently pull and stretch the skin, the color remains. Causes: UV exposure, eye rubbing, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH), genetics. Most common in East and South Asian skin.
Vascular Type (Bluish-Purple)
Blue or purple tint visible through thin under-eye skin. Pressing lightly and releasing briefly fades the color. Causes: poor sleep, fatigue, thin under-eye skin, sluggish circulation. Common in younger people and those with dry skin.
Structural Type (Shadow-Based)
Not actually dark — it's shadow. Caused by tear trough hollowing, fat pad migration, and collagen loss that creates under-eye depression. The hardest type to treat with topical products; filler or lifting procedures are most effective.
Self-diagnosis: In bright light, gently pull and slightly stretch the skin under one eye. If the darkness disappears, it’s vascular or structural. If it remains, it’s pigmented.
Ingredients by Type
For Pigmented Dark Circles
| Ingredient | How It Works | Concentration |
|---|
| Niacinamide | Blocks melanin transfer | 4–10% |
| Arbutin (alpha/beta) | Tyrosinase inhibition | 1–2% |
| Vitamin C | Inhibits melanin synthesis | 5–20% |
| Azelaic acid | Brightening + anti-inflammatory | 10–20% |
| Tranexamic acid | Blocks melanin migration | 2–5% |
For Vascular Dark Circles
| Ingredient | How It Works | Notes |
|---|
| Caffeine | Vasoconstriction, reduces puffiness | Under 5% |
| Vitamin K | May reduce vascular leakage | Some clinical support |
| Retinol | Thickens skin, reduces vessel visibility | Start at very low concentration |
| Peptides | Strengthens vessel walls, builds skin thickness | |
Realistic Guidance for Structural Type
Topical ingredients have minimal effect on structural dark circles. Retinol and peptides may slightly improve skin thickness, but if hollowing is the main cause, hyaluronic acid filler (tear trough correction) or radiofrequency/laser lifting is far more effective.
Under-Eye Care Guidelines
Stop Rubbing Your Eyes
Eye rubbing is a major contributor to pigmented dark circles. If allergy or dryness drives the urge to rub, treating that root cause is the first step.
SPF Is Essential Here Too
The under-eye area is exposed to UV. Using brightening ingredients without sun protection largely cancels out their effect.
Minimize Irritation
Under-eye skin is the thinnest on the face. Aggressive rubbing, high-concentration acids, or strong retinol can trigger PIH and worsen pigmented dark circles.
Frequently Asked Questions
My dark circles are genetic — is skincare worth anything?
Genetic predisposition makes complete resolution unlikely through skincare alone, but daily SPF, brightening actives, and adequate sleep maintain the current state and slow progression. For hereditary pigmented dark circles, pico laser toning is the most effective clinical option.
Is eye cream actually different from a regular face cream?
The active ingredients are often similar, but eye creams are formulated to be gentler for thin, sensitive under-eye skin. Using a regular face cream under the eyes is fine, but avoid formulas containing retinol, AHAs, or other potent actives that could cause irritation or PIH in this delicate area.
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