If your rash is on the face or eyelids and keeps coming back, it may not be “just eczema”. Get a clear diagnosis and a plan that actually works.
Red, itchy, irritated facial skin is common — but “facial eczema” in adults can represent more than one condition, and treatment differs depending on the pattern.
This page explains the three most common causes we see in adults:
1.Atopic dermatitis (true facial eczema)
2.Allergic/irritant contact dermatitis (very common on eyelids)
3.Peri-orificial dermatitis (often worsened by steroid creams)
[Book appointment] (Adult Facial Dermatitis Consultation)
Key takeaways
- Adult eyelid and facial dermatitis is often contact dermatitis (products, fragrance, preservatives, hair and nail products). (1–4)
- Peri-orificial dermatitis is a common facial mimic and often worsens with topical steroids. (5,6)
- If your rash is mostly eyelids/face/neck, patch testing is often high-yield. (2–4)
- The fastest way forward is usually: simplify products + treat correctly + identify triggers.
Related pages:
- Daily Routine for Adult Eczema
- Adult Eczema Triggers, Contact Dermatitis & Patch Testing
- Medications for Adult Eczema
- Infected Eczema in Adults
- Adult Eczema (Hub Page)
Jump links
- What “facial dermatitis” means
- The 3 most common patterns
- Quick self-check: what pattern fits you?
- Common triggers on the face and eyelids
- Who should consider patch testing
- A practical 2-week “reset plan”
- When to seek urgent review
- FAQs
- Book
What “facial dermatitis” means
“Dermatitis” simply means inflamed skin — typically redness, scaling, itch, stinging, or burning. On the face and eyelids, the skin is thinner and more reactive, so irritants and allergens cause problems more easily than on the body. (2–4)
The 3 most common patterns (and why they matter)
1) Atopic dermatitis (true facial eczema)
This is the classic eczema pattern where the skin barrier is weaker and inflammation flares in cycles. (1–3)
Clues
- itch is usually prominent
- background dryness/sensitivity elsewhere
- personal/family history of eczema, asthma, or hay fever can be present
- improves with consistent barrier care and an appropriate anti-inflammatory plan. (1–3)
Helpful next steps:
2) Contact dermatitis (irritant or allergic) — especially eyelids
This is one of the most common reasons adult facial/eyelid “eczema” persists.
- Irritant contact dermatitis is damage from products that are too harsh (over-cleansing, exfoliants, actives, fragrance).
- Allergic contact dermatitis is a true allergy to something that touches the skin (or transfers to it). (2–4)
Clues
- eyelids are involved (often both sides)
- rash flares after new skincare/cosmetics/sunscreen/hair products
- “it never fully clears” or keeps returning rapidly
- improvement on holidays and relapse at work or with daily routines
- more burning/stinging than itch in some cases. (2–4)
The overlooked cause: nail products transferring to eyelids
A very common (and often missed) pattern is eyelid dermatitis caused by nail products, because people touch or rub their eyes many times a day.
Even if you never apply a product directly to your eyelids, allergens and irritants can transfer from hands to eyelid skin from:
- nail polish
- gel nails / shellac
- acrylic nails
- nail glue and removers
Clue: eyelids flare soon after getting nails done, changing nail products, or using stronger removers — and often improve when nails are removed or products are stopped. (2–4)
Read more:
3) Peri-orificial dermatitis (eczema mimic)
Peri-orificial dermatitis is a facial inflammatory rash often centred around the mouth (and sometimes nose/eyes). It can look like “eczema”, but the behaviour is different. (5,6)
Clues
- small red bumps/papules ± pustules
- burning/stinging often more than itch
- often clusters around mouth/nose/eyes
- can worsen with heavy/occlusive moisturisers and cosmetics
- typically worsens with topical steroids (even if it improves briefly). (5,6)
If you suspect this pattern, it’s worth a review before repeatedly applying steroid cream to the face.
Quick self-check: which pattern fits best?
Use this as a guide — overlap is common.
Most likely contact dermatitis if:
- eyelids are the main site
- symptoms began in adulthood
- flares link to skincare/cosmetics/sunscreen/hair/nails
- rash is persistent despite “good eczema creams”. (2–4)
Most likely peri-orificial dermatitis if:
- rash is bumpy around mouth/nose/eyes
- stinging/burning > itch
- steroid creams make it worse long-term. (5,6)
Most likely atopic dermatitis if:
- you have eczema elsewhere or long history of sensitive, dry skin
- itch is dominant
- it responds well to barrier care + correct anti-inflammatory strategy. (1–3)
If you’re not sure, that’s normal — facial dermatitis is one of the areas where diagnosis matters most.
Common triggers on the face and eyelids (high yield)
Facial dermatitis often improves when you reduce exposure to the most common culprits:
Skincare and cosmetics
- fragrance (including essential oils)
- preservatives (MI/MCI and others)
- “active” products: retinoids, acids (AHA/BHA), vitamin C serums
- makeup and makeup removers
- sunscreen reactions (often fragrance/vehicle related). (2–4)
Hair and nail products (often overlooked)
- shampoo/conditioner and styling products (drip/transfer)
- hair dye (PPD)
- nail polish, gel, acrylic products (transfer to eyelids via hands). (2–4)
Metals and accessories
- nickel in jewellery, glasses frames, eyelash curlers, phone cases. (2–4)
Who should consider patch testing?
Patch testing is designed to identify allergic contact dermatitis and is often high-yield in recurrent eyelid/facial dermatitis. (2–4)
Patch testing becomes more worthwhile if:
- eyelids are involved
- rash is persistent or “treatment-resistant”
- you react to multiple products or “everything stings”
- there is a clear pattern with cosmetics, sunscreen, hair dye, fragrance, or nail products
- you have chronic hand eczema as well. (2–4)
Next step:
A practical 2-week “reset plan” (often the fastest improvement)
If you’re flaring now, this short reset can reduce irritation quickly and clarify triggers.
Step 1 — Strip back products
For 2 weeks, use only:
- one gentle fragrance-free cleanser
- one bland moisturiser
- one mineral sunscreen if needed
Avoid:
- retinoids, exfoliating acids, vitamin C serums
- fragrances/essential oils
- multiple “actives” layered together
Step 2 — Treat correctly (site-appropriate)
- facial/eyelid skin often needs a steroid-sparing plan rather than repeated steroid use. (1–3)
- if the pattern fits peri-orificial dermatitis, avoid using steroid creams as a long-term solution because it often rebounds/worsens. (5,6)
Helpful next step:
Step 3 — Reintroduce slowly
If you improve, reintroduce one product at a time every 5–7 days. If you flare, you’ve found a likely trigger.
When to seek urgent review
Seek prompt assessment if you have:
- rapidly worsening redness, swelling, warmth, or pain
- pus, heavy crusting, or spreading weeping patches
- fever or you feel unwell
- eye symptoms: significant eyelid swelling, eye pain, light sensitivity, or vision changes. (3,7)
Helpful next step:
FAQs
Why do my eyelids keep flaring?
Eyelids are a common site for allergic contact dermatitis and product transfer (skincare, cosmetics, hair products — and especially nail products). Patch testing can be high-yield. (2–4)
Can steroid creams be used on the face?
Sometimes, but facial skin is delicate. Repeated steroid use is not ideal on eyelids/face, and steroid-sparing options are often preferred for ongoing control. (1–3)
How do I know if it’s peri-orificial dermatitis?
If the rash is bumpy around mouth/nose/eyes and worsens after steroid creams, peri-orificial dermatitis becomes more likely. (5,6)
Book an appointment
If you’re dealing with persistent facial or eyelid dermatitis, we can help you get clarity fast — including:
- a correct diagnosis
- a simple “what to stop / what to use” plan
- and guidance on whether patch testing is worthwhile.
[Book appointment] (Adult Facial Dermatitis Consultation)
Clinics: Ivanhoe and Diamond Creek
References
1.Australian Prescriber. Treatments for atopic dermatitis. 22 June 2023. https://australianprescriber.tg.org.au/articles/treatments-for-atopic-dermatitis.html
2.Australasian College of Dermatologists. Contact dermatitis (overview, allergens, patch testing). https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/atoz/contact-dermatitis/
3.DermNet NZ. Atopic dermatitis. https://dermnetnz.org/topics/atopic-dermatitis
4.DermNet NZ. Patch tests. https://dermnetnz.org/topics/patch-tests
5.DermNet NZ. Periorificial dermatitis. https://dermnetnz.org/topics/periorificial-dermatitis
6.Australasian College of Dermatologists. Perioral dermatitis. https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/atoz/perioral-dermatitis/
7.DermNet NZ. Eczema herpeticum (HSV complication). https://dermnetnz.org/topics/eczema-herpeticum