Last Updated on March 9, 2026 by Giorgia Guazzarotti
South Korea has beauty standards that would make most of us anxious just reading about them. Skin needs to be poreless, luminous, and practically translucent (what they call glass skin) and that’s not a trend, that’s just Tuesday. The pressure is relentless, it starts young, and it has produced a clinical skincare industry so advanced that people are now flying in from the United States and Europe just to get treated there. But do Korean beauty treatments actually work? Some of them are genuinely backed by solid science. Some of them are backed by very enthusiastic marketing. And some are somewhere in the messy middle, where the mechanism makes sense but the clinical evidence hasn’t quite caught up yet. This article tells you which is which.
What’s Different About K-Beauty Clinics?
In South Korea, going to a dermatologist isn’t something you do when your skin gets bad enough. It’s something you do regularly for prevention, the way you’d get a dental cleaning. This routine starts in your 20s and it never stops… and it’s why the Koreans have such great skin. What happens there is different too. Korean clinics also combine multiple treatments in a single visit. One appointment might involve a pico laser for pigmentation, a skin booster injection for hydration, and radiofrequency for tightening – all in one afternoon. In the West, those would typically be three separate appointments, spread across months, at three different price points. None of which means every clinic is excellent, or that beauty tourism to South Korea is automatically going to give you the skin of your dreams. Do your research before booking anything. On that note, below you’ll find some common skin treatments offered at Korean dermatology clinics:
Related: 4 Lessons I’ve Learned From Korean Skincare
Rejuran Healer (PDRN Injections)
Rejuran Healer is probably the most famous treatment to come out of Korean dermatology in recent years, and the star ingredient PDRN (or polydeoxyribonucleotide, derived from salmon sperm DNA) sounds completely unhinged the first time you hear it. The mechanism, though, is actually legitimate, which is more than you can say for a lot of things in the beauty space. PDRN works by activating adenosine A2A receptors in the skin, triggering tissue repair, collagen production, and anti-inflammatory effects deep in the dermis. It’s injected in tiny amounts across the face using fine needles, targeting the dermis directly rather than sitting on top of the skin doing very little. What people typically notice after a course of sessions is improved skin texture, better hydration, softer fine lines, and an overall quality improvement that’s hard to attribute to any one thing – skin just looks more alive.
So far so good. Here’s where it gets more complicated. A 2025 systematic review of polynucleotide treatments found statistically significant improvements in wrinkle reduction, skin texture, and skin elasticity across multiple studies – but when you read the actual review, it found only nine studies that met quality criteria, covering a grand total of 219 patients. That is not a lot of people. The studies used different formulations, different outcome measures, and short follow-up periods, which makes it genuinely hard to draw sweeping conclusions.
What we have with Rejuran is a treatment with a solid theoretical basis, a well-understood mechanism, a good safety profile, and early clinical results that consistently point in the right direction. What we don’t have is the kind of large-scale, long-term randomized controlled trial data that would let you say with confidence exactly what it does and for whom. That gap between “the biology makes sense” and “we have definitive proof” is where a lot of K-beauty treatments live, and Rejuran is no exception.
If you’re considering it: go in expecting gradual improvement over a series of sessions, not a transformation after one appointment. And be skeptical of any clinic making very specific promises about outcomes – the evidence doesn’t support that level of certainty yet.
Pico Laser Treatment
Pico lasers are one of the popular treatments where the science is actually pretty solid, and where Korean clinics have genuinely refined the application beyond what you’ll typically find elsewhere. The technology delivers ultra-short pulses of laser energy (measured in picoseconds, which is one trillionth of a second) that shatter pigment particles through a mechanical rather than heat-based mechanism. Because the pulses are so fast, there’s significantly less collateral damage to surrounding tissue, which matters a lot especially for medium and darker skin tones.
It works for uneven skin tone, melasma, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, and acne scars. A 2023 randomized controlled trial found that picosecond lasers produced significant pigmentation improvement – though the same study noted that topical hydroquinone is still considered first-line therapy for melasma. Where pico does clearly outperform older laser technology is in the side effect profile. A split-face comparison study found that pico laser caused post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (that deeply annoying darkening that can follow laser treatment, especially on darker skin) in 27% of cases compared to 54% for Q-switched laser, and the duration of that PIH was shorter too. For anyone with a medium to deeper skin tone, that difference is significant.
Pico laser is that it’s almost never a one-session fix. It’s done in a series, at regular intervals, as part of ongoing skin maintenance. The gradual approach is deliberate: you’re chipping away carefully rather than trying to blast everything at once, which reduces complications and produces steadier results.
Ultrasound Lifting (HIFU)
High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU, or ultrasound lifting as it tends to be called in Korean clinics) is one of the most popular non-invasive treatments for skin laxity. Here’s how it works: focused ultrasound energy is delivered into the deeper layers of the skin (including the SMAS layer, which is the same structural layer that surgical facelifts address) generating controlled thermal injury at precise depths without damaging the surface. The body responds by producing new collagen over the following months. You’re waiting three to six months to see the full effect.
A 2025 systematic review of 45 clinical trials found that HIFU showed significant efficacy in skin tightening, particularly in the lower face, neck, and around the eyes, with improvements in skin laxity ranging from 18% to 30%. A separate meta-analysis of 17 studies found moderate improvement for facial and neck rejuvenation, with fewer than 5% of patients reporting anything beyond temporary redness, swelling, or mild discomfort. That’s a decent evidence base for a non-invasive treatment.
But there are real limitations. The systematic reviews consistently flag that treatment protocols vary enormously between practitioners and studies, making results hard to predict reliably. Long-term data is thin: most studies follow patients for three to six months, so what happens to those results at the two-year mark is genuinely unclear. And HIFU works best for mild to moderate laxity. If you have significant sagging, the honest answer is that it probably won’t do enough. It’s a prevention and early-intervention tool, which is exactly how Korean clinics use it – starting patients young, before things get to the point where plastic surgery would be the conversation.
One thing that often gets undersold: it can be painful. The sensation of focused ultrasound hitting deeper tissue, especially over bony areas, is sharp and genuinely uncomfortable. Most people find it manageable. Some do not. The “minimal downtime” claim is accurate – redness and mild swelling for a day or two at most – but going in expecting it to be easy might mean you’re caught off guard on the table.
Aqua Peel
The aqua peel (also called hydradermabrasion) is the treatment most international patients get on their first visit to a Korean clinic, and honestly it makes sense as an entry point. It combines mild exfoliation of the outer layer of the skin with simultaneous infusion of skin boosters (hydrating ingredients, antioxidants, sometimes vitamin C) in a single pass. No needles, no lasers, no real downtime. You walk out with skin that looks cleaner, brighter, and more hydrated than when you walked in.
The clinical research on it is thinner than the marketing suggests. One study compared hydradermabrasion with manual serum application and found that the hydradermabrasion group showed significant improvements in epidermal thickness, fine lines, pore size, and hyperpigmentation, with increased fibroblast density and collagen remodelling – while the manual application group showed no detectable skin changes at all. It’s not a dramatic treatment. It won’t address deep pigmentation, and it’s not going to remodel your collagen. But for congested skin, dry skin, rough texture, or skin that just needs a proper reset, it works, and it works immediately.
Radiofrequency (RF) Treatments
Radiofrequency is one of the workhorses of Korean dermatology. Less glamorous than Rejuran or pico laser, but consistently useful, and often the thing that ties a multi-treatment protocol together. RF energy heats the dermis without damaging the surface, stimulating collagen and elastin production over time. When combined with microneedling, it gets delivered deeper into the tissue and produces more significant remodelling, particularly for acne scars, enlarged pores, and smoother skin texture.
The evidence for RF in skin tightening and texture improvement is reasonably well-established, though it shares the same limitation as most aesthetic treatments. The studies are often small, the protocols inconsistent, and the follow-up periods short. What it has going for it is a long clinical track record, a mechanism that’s well-understood, and a safety profile that’s been tested across a wide range of skin types and specific skin concerns. The results from RF are slow. We’re talking months, not days. It’s not the treatment you do when you want to look better for something in three weeks. It’s the treatment you do as part of a longer-term skin health strategy.
Should You Actually Go to Seoul?
If you’re seriously considering beauty tourism to South Korea, the practical answer is: it depends on what you’re trying to treat, how much you’re willing to spend, and whether you can realistically manage aftercare from home. The combination approach that makes Korean clinics so effective requires follow-up sessions to work properly. Rejuran typically needs three to four sessions. Pico laser works in a series. HIFU results build over months. If you’re flying in for a single visit and flying back out, you’re getting a fraction of what the system is actually designed to deliver. Some people still find that fraction worth it – the quality of treatment, the technology, and the pricing compared to equivalent clinics in New York City or London can make a single trip genuinely worthwhile. But go in with clear eyes about what one visit can and can’t do.
If going to Seoul isn’t on the table, many of these treatments are available at good clinics in the United States and Europe. The gap is less about the treatments themselves and more about the protocol design – finding a practitioner who thinks in terms of layered, preventive, ongoing skin health rather than individual procedures. That approach exists outside South Korea. It’s just less baked into the system.
The Bottom Line
Korean cosmetic procedures ren’t all created equal, and they’re not all going to deliver the glass skin promised on every clinic’s website. Pico laser for pigmentation has solid clinical backing. HIFU for early skin laxity has meaningful evidence across multiple systematic reviews. Rejuran is promising and mechanistically sound, but the clinical trial data is still early and thin. Aqua peel is genuinely good for what it is – which is a solid, low-risk maintenance treatment, not a miracle. What Korean dermatology does consistently well isn’t any single treatment. It’s the approach: preventive, systematic, layered, and sustained over time. That’s the part that actually produces the skin you’ve been looking at and wondering about. And that part you can apply anywhere.