Collection: Safe for Post Treatment

Brand guide

About Safe for Post Treatment

Post-treatment skin usually needs comfort before correction. This edit is for skin that feels fragile after procedures, strong actives, dryness or barrier stress. The priority is gentle cleansing, soothing moisture, barrier support and SPF when your provider allows it. Avoid chasing glow too early; skin that is hot, tight or peeling needs time and simple support.

Brand science

Key Technology

Supportive ingredients include panthenol, madecassoside, glycerin, hyaluronic acid, zinc, copper and gentle PHA bionic acids in formulas made for sensitive or reactive skin. These ingredients help cushion and hydrate while the barrier settles. Retinoids, strong vitamin C and exfoliating acids should wait until the skin is calm and intact.

Shopping guide

How to Choose

Follow your clinic or doctor's aftercare first. Once skincare is allowed, choose a gentle cleanser and a soothing balm or moisturiser. Add SPF if approved, especially after peels, lasers or pigment-focused treatments. Reintroduce actives one at a time, and stop if stinging, swelling or unusual redness appears.

Safe for Post Treatment FAQs

Common questions about Safe for Post Treatment products and routines.

What should I use first after a peel, laser or strong active reaction?
Use your clinic or doctor’s aftercare instructions first. Once skincare is allowed, keep the routine very simple: gentle cleanse if needed, a soothing moisturiser or balm, and sunscreen when permitted. Do not use retinoids, scrubs, strong vitamin C or exfoliating acids until the skin is calm, intact and no longer unusually hot, swollen or tender.
How do I know if my skin barrier needs repair before more actives?
Signs include stinging with basic products, tightness, flaking, unusual redness, burning or a shiny uncomfortable surface. That is not the moment for more exfoliation. Focus on bland moisturising, ceramides, panthenol, madecassoside, glycerin or barrier balms. Reintroduce corrective products one at a time only after the skin feels comfortable again.
Can I use sunscreen on post-treatment skin?
Often yes, but timing depends on the treatment. After procedures such as peels or laser, your practitioner may give specific instructions about when to apply sunscreen. Once allowed, broad-spectrum SPF is important because treated skin can be more vulnerable to UV-triggered redness and pigmentation. Choose a gentle texture and avoid rubbing aggressively.