Skincare Routine for Peri-oral (Peri-orificial) Dermatitis
A barrier-first routine that settles flares faster (Melbourne: Ivanhoe + Diamond Creek)
Peri-oral / peri-orificial dermatitis is one of those conditions where more skincare often makes it worse. The goal is to reduce irritation, remove occlusion, and let your skin recover — then rebuild a routine you can tolerate long term. (1–3)
[Book a combined appointment]
20 minutes with Dr Chris Irwin + 40 minutes with an expert dermal therapist
Diagnosis + prescriptions (if needed) + a practical, personalised routine (including what to stop and what to restart).
Key takeaways
- The most effective routine is usually the simplest: less product, less friction, less switching. (1–3)
- During an active flare, many guidelines recommend stopping facial cosmetics and most topical products, especially occlusive moisturisers and sunscreens that irritate. (1,2)
- Once stable, you can reintroduce products slowly to prevent relapse. (1,4)
Jump links
- The routine (active flare)
- Moisturiser rules (when you’re tight/dry)
- Sunscreen strategy (without triggering a flare)
- Makeup rules (if you must wear it)
- Cleansing mistakes that keep you stuck
- The “reintroduction ladder” (after you’re calm)
- What to avoid long term
- FAQs
- Book
The routine during an active flare (the 2–3 week reset)
The aim is to remove the “fuel” that keeps inflammation going.
Morning
1.Cleanse gently
- Preferably lukewarm water alone, or a very mild non-soap cleanser if you need it. (1)
2.Prescription topical (if prescribed)
- Apply exactly as directed.
3.Moisturiser only if needed
- Use a minimal amount of a bland, non-occlusive option if the skin feels tight or cracked (see moisturiser rules). (1)
Evening
1.Gentle cleanse (as above) (1)
2.Prescription topical (if prescribed)
3.Minimal moisturiser if needed (1)
What to stop during the reset
- All topical steroid creams on the face (including “mild” hydrocortisone). (2,3)
- Facial cosmetics (foundation, concealer over the rash) and most active skincare. (1,2)
- Occlusive moisturisers / ointments / balms that trap heat and irritation. (1,2)
- Scrubs, cleansing brushes, exfoliants, strong acids, retinoids, benzoyl peroxide on the area (unless specifically directed). (1–3)
Moisturiser rules (when you’re tight/dry)
A common problem: people either keep using a heavy cream (which can perpetuate the rash) or they stop everything and the skin cracks.
A practical middle path:
- If you’re uncomfortable, use a bland emollient with a short ingredient list. (1)
- Avoid occlusive creams and ointments if they worsen bumps/redness. (1)
- Use the smallest amount that relieves tightness — think “support the barrier, don’t seal it in.”
Your dermal therapist will usually choose one option and keep it stable while the medical plan does its work (this is why the combined appointment helps).
Sunscreen strategy (without triggering a flare)
Sunscreen is important, but peri-orificial dermatitis can be irritated by heavier or more reactive formulas. Standard guidance often recommends stopping sunscreens during an active flare if they sting or worsen symptoms, and using physical sun protection (hat/shade) short term. (1,2)
During a flare
- If sunscreen irritates, use hat/shade until the skin is calmer. (1)
- If you must use sunscreen, choose the least irritating, non-occlusive option and avoid layering multiple products underneath. (1)
Once the flare is settling
- Reintroduce sunscreen using the reintroduction ladder (below).
- Many patients tolerate lighter textures better (gel or fluid formats rather than thick creams). (1)
Makeup rules (if you must wear it)
Makeup often perpetuates peri-orificial dermatitis because it increases occlusion and friction.
If you must wear makeup:
- Avoid liquid foundation/concealer directly over the rash during a flare. (1,2)
- If coverage is essential, use the lightest option possible and remove it gently at day’s end.
- Keep the routine stable — switching primers/foundations repeatedly is a common reason people stay inflamed.
Cleansing mistakes that keep you stuck
These are the “well-intended” habits that often prolong symptoms:
- Over-cleansing or scrubbing (barrier damage + ongoing irritation)
- Using multiple acne actives because it “looks like pimples” (it isn’t acne) (1–3)
- Trying a new product every few days (you never learn what your skin tolerates)
The reintroduction ladder (after you’re calm)
Once you’ve had a stable improvement phase (often 2–4+ weeks), the next goal is preventing relapse.
Rule: Introduce one change every 5–7 days (or slower if very reactive). (4)
Suggested order:
1.Mild cleanser (if you weren’t already using one)
2.A single bland moisturiser (if needed)
3.A tolerable sunscreen in a light format (if you paused it)
4.Optional: minimal makeup (if required)
5.Only later: carefully selected actives (if appropriate for your skin)
If something stings, triggers bumps, or increases redness within the first week, it’s usually not the right product right now.
What to avoid long term (the relapse preventers)
Even after you’re clear, these are common relapse drivers:
- Facial topical steroids “just for a few days” (classic rebound cycle) (2,3)
- Heavy occlusive moisturisers / balms as daily staples (2)
- Frequent scrubs, strong exfoliation, and aggressive “acne routines” (1–3)
If you’re unsure whether your routine is contributing, start at the peri-oral (peri-orificial) dermatitis patient hub page and follow the staged pathway.
FAQs
Do I have to stop moisturiser completely?
Not always. Many guidelines support using a bland, non-irritating emollient if dryness is significant, while avoiding heavy occlusive products that worsen the rash. (1)
Why does sunscreen sometimes make it worse?
Some products can feel heavy or irritating during a flare, and layered routines can increase occlusion. Many patients do best pausing irritating formulas short term, then reintroducing slowly once calmer. (1,2)
When can I restart actives like retinoids or acids?
Usually only after you are stable, and only one change at a time. If your skin is highly reactive, your plan may avoid actives entirely for longer.
Book
If your skin feels like “nothing agrees with it”, the answer is usually not more products — it’s a simpler routine + the right medical plan.
[Book a combined appointment]
20 minutes with Dr Chris Irwin + 40 minutes with an expert dermal therapist
Ivanhoe: Unit 1, 1065 Heidelberg Road, Ivanhoe VIC 3079
Diamond Creek: Shop 12, 67 Main Hurstbridge Road, Diamond Creek VIC 3089
References
1.DermNet NZ. Periorificial dermatitis. (Accessed 2026). https://dermnetnz.org/topics/periorificial-dermatitis
2.Australasian College of Dermatologists. Perioral dermatitis. (Accessed 2026). https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/atoz/perioral-dermatitis/
3.Tolaymat L, Hall M. Perioral Dermatitis. StatPearls (NCBI Bookshelf). (Updated 2023; accessed 2026). https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK525968/
4.Cleveland Clinic. Perioral Dermatitis: Treatment, Symptoms & Causes. (Accessed 2026). https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21458-perioral-dermatitis