💎Which Hormones Can Trigger Acne and Skin Breakouts?
Acne is not only a surface skin problem.
Many people think acne happens only because the skin is dirty, oily, or clogged. But in many cases, skin breakouts are influenced by internal changes, especially hormones.
Hormones can affect oil production, inflammation, skin sensitivity, healing speed, and how easily the skin leaves marks after acne.
This is why some people break out before their period, during stress, after poor sleep, after eating certain foods, or during major body changes such as pregnancy, breastfeeding, postpartum, perimenopause, or hormone-related imbalance.
In this article, I want to explain the main hormones that may be related to acne and pimples, especially androgens, insulin, progesterone, and stress hormones.
🩸What Are Hormonal Breakouts?
Hormonal breakouts are acne or pimple-like breakouts that are influenced by changes inside the body.
They may appear as:
- deeper painful pimples
- inflamed papules or pustules
- clogged pores
- chin and jawline breakouts
- breakouts before menstruation
- breakouts during stress or poor sleep
- acne that comes back repeatedly in the same area
Hormonal breakouts are not always severe. Sometimes they appear as small bumps, congestion, or repeated pimples that do not fully calm down.
1. Androgens and Acne
Androgens are hormones that are present in both men and women. They are often called “male-type hormones,” but women also naturally have androgens.
Androgens can stimulate the sebaceous glands, which are the oil glands in the skin.
When androgen activity increases, the skin may produce more sebum. More sebum can mix with dead skin cells inside the follicle and contribute to clogged pores, blackheads, whiteheads, and inflamed acne.
This is why androgen-related breakouts often appear around the:
- chin
- jawline
- lower face
- neck area
- sometimes chest or back
Androgen-related acne may also feel deeper, more tender, or more repetitive.
Clinical Insight
In my clinical experience, many adult acne clients do not have extremely oily skin. Some have dehydrated or barrier-weakened skin, but they still experience hormonal breakouts.
This is why acne treatment should not focus only on “drying oil.” The skin still needs hydration, barrier support, and inflammation control.
2. Insulin and Blood Sugar Changes
Insulin is a hormone that helps control blood sugar.
When we eat high-sugar foods or high-glycemic foods, blood sugar can rise quickly. The body responds by releasing insulin.
Higher insulin activity may influence other hormone pathways and may also support more oil production and inflammation in acne-prone skin.
This does not mean sugar is the only cause of acne. Acne is more complex than that. But for some people, frequent blood sugar spikes may make breakouts worse.
Common triggers may include:
- sugary drinks
- desserts
- candy
- white bread
- pastries
- highly processed snacks
- frequent high-sugar meals
When insulin and inflammation are repeatedly stimulated, acne-prone skin may become more reactive.
Clinical Insight
Some clients notice more breakouts after periods of high sugar, processed foods, or irregular meals. In these cases, the skin may show more congestion, inflammation, and slower healing.
Acne treatment should include the skin barrier, but lifestyle patterns can also influence how often breakouts return.
3. Progesterone, Pregnancy, Breastfeeding, and Skin Changes
Progesterone changes throughout the menstrual cycle, and it also increases during pregnancy.
For some women, hormonal changes during pregnancy or breastfeeding may trigger more breakouts. For others, the skin may look calmer, smoother, and more radiant.
This is why pregnancy skin is not the same for everyone.
Some clients may experience:
- fewer breakouts
- more glow
- flushing
- more sensitivity
- thinner-feeling skin
- pigmentation changes
- dryness or dehydration
During pregnancy and breastfeeding, the body goes through many internal changes. Hormones, blood circulation, water retention, sleep, stress, and lifestyle changes can all affect the skin.
Some women say their skin looks more beautiful during pregnancy. When I see this, I often tell my clients:
“Your baby brings your beauty.”
It is a warm way to describe the pregnancy glow.
However, pregnancy and breastfeeding skincare should be gentle and safe. Strong acne ingredients, harsh peels, and aggressive treatments should be avoided unless approved by a medical professional.
4. Premenstrual Breakouts
For some women, breakouts become worse before their period.
This may happen because hormonal shifts can affect oil production, water retention, inflammation, and skin sensitivity.
Premenstrual breakouts often appear around the:
- chin
- jawline
- lower cheeks
- mouth area
These breakouts may feel deeper or more swollen than regular pimples.
Progesterone itself is not always the only cause. The balance between estrogen, progesterone, and androgen activity can all influence how the skin reacts.
This is why some women say:
“My skin is fine most of the month, but it breaks out before my period.”
5. Stress Hormones and Skin Breakouts
Stress can affect the skin strongly.
When the body is under stress, it releases stress hormones such as cortisol. Cortisol is connected with the body’s stress response.
When stress is ongoing, the skin may become more inflamed, more sensitive, and slower to repair.
Stress may contribute to:
- acne flare-ups
- more oiliness in some people
- slower healing
- more redness
- more sensitivity
- weakened skin barrier
- picking or touching the skin more often
Stress-related breakouts may not always look like classic hormonal acne. Sometimes the skin looks irritated, rough, red, itchy, or reactive.
🦠Stress, Eczema, and Sensitive Areas of the Face
Stress hormones do not affect only acne.
In some people, stress may also trigger or worsen eczema-like irritation, especially around sensitive areas such as:
- around the eyes
- eyelids
- around the nose
- around the mouth
- corners of the lips
These areas have thinner or more reactive skin. When the skin barrier is weak, stress, dryness, rubbing, allergens, or irritating skincare products can make the area worse.
Stress-related skin irritation may appear as:
- redness
- dryness
- flaking
- itching
- burning
- rough patches
- tightness
This is different from acne. It should not be treated with harsh acne products.
Using strong acids, retinoids, benzoyl peroxide, or drying acne products around the eyes, nose, or mouth can make irritation worse.
In the early stage of mild eczema-like irritation, a gentle barrier-supporting cream may help. Creams that contain zinc can sometimes calm and protect irritated skin by supporting the skin barrier.
However, if the symptoms do not improve, keep returning, become painful, spread, or affect the eyelids strongly, it is important to visit a dermatologist or immunologist.
In my clinical experience, some clients with eczema improved significantly after receiving proper medical treatment. This is why eczema should not be ignored or treated only as dry skin.
🍨Dairy Products and Breakouts
Some people notice more breakouts after dairy products.
Dairy may be connected to acne in some individuals, but it does not affect everyone the same way. The relationship may involve insulin-like growth factors, hormone signaling, inflammation, or individual sensitivity.
Common dairy-related triggers may include:
- milk
- skim milk
- ice cream
- sweetened dairy drinks
- whey protein products
This does not mean every person with acne must stop all dairy. But if someone repeatedly notices breakouts after dairy intake, it may be helpful to observe the pattern.
A simple food and skin diary can help identify whether dairy is truly related.
Clinical Insight
I do not like blaming only one food for acne. Acne is usually influenced by many factors together: hormones, inflammation, skin barrier condition, skincare products, diet, stress, sleep, and genetics.
But if a client says, “I always break out after dairy,” I think it is worth paying attention to that pattern.
💥Why Hormonal Breakouts Can Leave PIH
Hormonal acne often becomes inflamed.
When inflammation is deeper or lasts longer, the skin may be more likely to leave post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, also known as PIH.
This is especially important for pigmentation-prone skin, including Asian, South Asian, Middle Eastern, Hispanic, and African skin tones.
When acne is treated too aggressively, the skin barrier can become weaker. This may increase redness, irritation, inflammation, and PIH risk.
This is why hormonal acne needs a balanced approach.
The goal is not only to clear the breakout. The goal is also to calm inflammation, protect the skin barrier, and reduce the chance of long-lasting marks.
🎆Common Mistakes With Hormonal Breakouts
Many people try to treat hormonal breakouts by drying the skin too much.
Common mistakes include:
- over-cleansing
- using too many acne products
- over-exfoliating
- picking deep pimples
- using strong acids too often
- applying acne medication around irritated eye or mouth areas
- skipping moisturizer
- ignoring stress and sleep
These habits may temporarily make the skin feel “clean,” but they can weaken the barrier and make inflammation worse.
🎇Professional Treatment Approach
Hormonal breakouts need a careful and consistent approach.
For non-inflammatory congestion, the skin may need gentle pore-clearing support and regular barrier-friendly care.
For inflamed hormonal acne, the skin needs calming, hydration, inflammation control, and PIH prevention.
If acne is deep, painful, cystic, sudden, or associated with irregular periods, hair growth changes, or other body symptoms, it is important to consult a medical professional.
Esthetic care can support the skin barrier, reduce congestion, improve hydration, and help prevent irritation, but medical evaluation may be needed for internal hormonal imbalance.
🧠Clinical Insight
In my clinical experience, many hormonal breakout clients do not need harsher skincare. They need a more balanced plan.
The skin may be oily in some areas, dehydrated in others, inflamed under the surface, and very prone to PIH.
This is why I always look at the full skin condition, not only the pimple.
Hormonal acne is not just about oil. It is also about inflammation, skin barrier condition, stress, healing, and pigmentation risk.
✨Key Takeaway
Hormones can influence acne and skin breakouts in many ways.
Androgens may increase oil production. Insulin and blood sugar changes may influence inflammation and acne activity. Progesterone shifts may be connected with premenstrual breakouts. Pregnancy and breastfeeding may also change the skin, sometimes improving the skin and sometimes making it more sensitive or breakout-prone.
Stress hormones may worsen acne, sensitivity, eczema-like irritation, and barrier weakness.
Dairy products may also trigger breakouts in some people, although the relationship is individual.
The best approach is not to attack the skin aggressively. Hormonal breakouts need calm, consistent, barrier-supportive care.
Healthy skin is not only clear skin. Healthy skin is balanced skin.
🧠 Related Reading
Angelina
Medical Esthetician (18 years experience)
Skin Logic By Angelina



