Last Updated on March 12, 2026 by Giorgia Guazzarotti
Chemical peel vs facial: which one is right for your skin? Maybe you’ve got dark spots that have been squatting on your cheeks rent-free for two years and absolutely nothing is shifting them. Maybe it’s that rough texture that looks fine in your bathroom mirror and then absolutely betrays you in natural light. Maybe you’re just tired of spending money on products that promise everything and deliver a vibe. And now you’re wondering which of these facial treatments are going to improve your skin’s appearance with minimal downtime. So here it is: what each treatment actually does, what the research supports, and how to figure out which one your skin actually needs right now.
What Is A Facial And What Are The Different Types?
A facial is a multi-step skin treatment performed by an esthetician and the basic skeleton is always roughly the same: thorough cleansing of the skin, some form of exfoliation, extractions of blackheads if needed, a mask, moisturiser, done. Simple enough. Except then you look at an actual treatment menu and there are fourteen different facials with names like “Radiance Revival” and “Urban Detox Glow” and suddenly you have no idea what you’re looking at anymore. So let’s cut through it. The type of facial matters because different facials are doing genuinely different things to your skin.
- A classic or basic facial is exactly what it sounds like. Deep cleansing, manual extractions of blackheads and congestion, hydration, maybe a calming mask. It’s maintenance. It keeps your pores clean, your skin’s surface healthy, and your complexion ticking along nicely. It is not going to fix your acne scars. It was never trying to.
- An enzyme facial uses proteolytic enzymes (usually from papaya or pineapple) to dissolve the proteins holding dead skin cells together on the skin’s surface. It’s gentle, it doesn’t go deep, and it’s genuinely lovely for sensitive skin that throws a tantrum at the mere suggestion of an acid. The exfoliation is real, the results are mild, and if you come out glowing it’s because your skin wasn’t stressed into rebellion for once.
- An AHA or glycolic acid facial is where the line between “facial” and “chemical peel” starts getting blurry – because when a facial uses alpha-hydroxy acids in the exfoliation step, it is technically delivering a superficial chemical peel treatment. The difference is in the concentration and pH of the acid. A brightening facial at a day spa might use glycolic acid at 5-8% at a relatively high pH. A clinical peel uses it at 30-50% at a much lower pH, and those two things are not the same. Glycolic acid at clinical concentrations has a genuinely strong evidence base for hyperpigmentation, fine lines, and photoaging – it’s a documented first-line treatment for melasma in the dermatology literature. The spa version is a cousin. A friendly, mild-mannered cousin who doesn’t change much.
- A HydraFacial is a device-based treatment that combines cleansing, gentle exfoliation via a vortex tip, vacuum extractions, and serum infusion all in one go. It sounds like a gimmick until you look at the clinical data, and then it’s a bit more interesting. A multicenter study found that six biweekly HydraFacial treatments increased the proportion of acne patients rated clear or almost clear from 20% to 65% over 12 weeks. A separate randomised controlled trial found measurable increases in epidermal thickness, reduced pore size, and decreased fine lines in the treated group – while applying the same serum manually, without the device, showed no detectable skin changes at all. Both studies are small, and one had a company-affiliated author, so keep that in mind. But the data exists, which is more than you can say for most facials.
- An IPL photofacial uses intense pulsed light to target pigmentation and redness at a deeper level than any topical treatment can reach. It’s in a category of its own – less about exfoliation and cell turnover, more about dismantling the melanin clusters and broken capillaries that cause uneven skin tone and redness. If sun damage is your main concern, this is worth a serious conversation with a clinician.
Related: My Full Hydrafacial Review
What Is A Chemical Peel And What Are the Different Types?
A chemical peel is a treatment where a chemical solution is applied to the skin at a concentration high enough to cause controlled exfoliation (and depending on the depth, controlled injury). That sounds alarming. It isn’t. The “injury” is the point, because it’s that wound-healing response that triggers collagen production and gives you genuinely structural improvements in your skin, not just a youthful glow. The types of chemical peels break down by depth, and the depth determines everything: what concerns it can treat, how much downtime you’re signing up for, and what results you can realistically expect.
- Superficial peels work on the outer layer of the skin. The usual players are glycolic acid, lactic acid, mandelic acid, and salicylic acid – all at concentrations that accelerate cell turnover without breaking the skin’s barrier. Downtime is minimal, maybe a day of mild sensitivity and some light flaking. For acne-prone skin specifically, salicylic acid is the one you want – it’s oil-soluble, which means it gets into the pore lining in a way water-soluble acids physically can’t, and research shows it delivers better sustained results with fewer adverse effects than glycolic acid for acne. For pigmentation and photoaging, glycolic acid at 30-50% is your workhorse.
- Medium-depth peels use trichloroacetic acid, usually at 20-35%, and they go further – into the upper dermis. This is where you start getting real collagen remodelling, not just faster cell turnover. Histological studies on TCA peels show measurable increases in dermal thickness, higher glycosaminoglycan levels, and visible rearrangement of collagen and elastic fibres after treatment. Your skin is structurally rebuilding itself. That’s why the results last longer and look different from anything a superficial peel or facial can achieve. Downtime is real though – expect several days of peeling and redness, and a week of looking like you made a questionable decision before you start looking like you made an excellent one.
- Deep peels using high-concentration TCA or phenol are the most intensive option and genuinely not something to book casually. They’re reserved for significant sun damage, deep lines, or the appearance of scars that haven’t responded to anything else. The results can be remarkable. The recovery is serious, the risk of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (dark spots) is real especially in darker skin tones, and this is a procedure that needs proper medical supervision. Full stop.
So Which One Do You Actually Need?
If you have specific skin concerns – dark spots, acne scars, rough texture from sun damage, fine lines that have crossed the line from “fine” to “actually bothering me” – a clinical chemical peel is going to get you further than a facial, faster. The mechanism is understood, the depth is controlled, the outcomes for pigmentation and photoaging are documented. You’re not hoping for the best. You’re working with something that has a real evidence base and a clear mechanism of action.
If your skin is in decent shape and what you actually want is regular maintenance – clean pores, hydration, that healthy radiant skin feeling, staying on top of cell renewal so things don’t deteriorate – professional facials are genuinely a good choice. Monthly facials won’t transform your skin the way a course of peels can, but they support your overall skin health, they’re appropriate for sensitive skin that can’t handle clinical-grade acids, and when you factor in the relaxation component, they’re doing something for your nervous system that a chemical peel absolutely is not.
The most honest thing to say is that these aren’t rivals. A lot of people who get the best results are doing both (peels for the structural work, facials for the maintenance) just at different intervals and for different reasons.
The Bottom Line
The truth is, neither treatment is universally better – they’re just built for different jobs. A chemical peel goes to work on the stuff that’s actually bothering you: the pigmentation, the texture, the scars, the damage that’s been sitting there ignoring everything you’ve thrown at it. A facial keeps your skin healthy, maintained, and happy in between. Some people need one. Some people need the other. A lot of people, honestly, need both. The best thing you can do is stop guessing and get in front of a skincare professional who can actually look at your skin and tell you what it needs. Because the right treatment for your skin isn’t the one that worked for someone else – it’s the one that’s right for you.