How to Determine Your Skin Type Accurately

How to Determine Your Skin Type Accurately

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Learning how to determine your skin type was the single most useful thing I did for my skin – and I got it wrong for almost a decade. I spent years buying products for “oily” skin when I actually had dehydrated combination skin. After consulting with two dermatologists here in LA and testing every method I could find, I finally figured out an approach that’s accurate and doesn’t require a trip to the doctor. Here’s everything I wish someone had told me from the start.

Quick Answer
How to determine your skin type: wash your face with a gentle cleanser, wait 30 minutes with nothing on your skin, then check your T-zone, cheeks, and chin for oiliness, tightness, or redness. Your results point to one of five types – oily, dry, combination, sensitive, or normal. But as I learned this past year (testing updated Jan 2026), your skin type can shift with seasons, hormones, and age, so retesting every 6–12 months matters more than most guides mention.

Key Takeaways

  • Your skin type (how much oil you produce) and your skin concerns (acne, hyperpigmentation, aging) are two separate things that require separate solutions.
  • Dehydrated skin and dry skin are not the same – you can be oily and dehydrated at the same time, and treating them interchangeably damages your skin barrier.
  • Skin type shifts with age, hormones, medications, seasons, and climate. Retesting every 6–12 months prevents you from using the wrong products.
  • The bare-face method and blotting sheet test are solid starting points, but the 12-hour tracking method I outline below gives you a much clearer picture.
  • Your skin barrier and microbiome health affect how your skin type presents itself – a compromised barrier can make normal skin behave like sensitive skin.

Why Your Skin Type Is the Starting Line, Not the Finish

Most skin type guides treat identification as the entire goal. You figure out you’re “oily” or “dry,” get pointed toward a product shelf, and that’s it. What I wasn’t expecting is that knowing your skin type is only the foundation – what sits on top of it is a whole layer of context that determines whether your routine actually works.

Your skin type describes your baseline oil production. It’s primarily genetic – inherited from your parents – and determined by how active your sebaceous glands are. According to the American Academy of Dermatology, the five recognized skin types are oily, dry, normal, combination, and sensitive. But here’s what surprised me: your skin type isn’t a life sentence. It shifts. Mine went from oily in my early twenties to combination in my early thirties, and I didn’t realize it until I was still stripping my skin with salicylic acid cleansers that I no longer needed.

The mistake I see repeated in most guides – and I read over a dozen while researching this – is that they stop at identification. They’ll tell you the five types, give you a 30-minute test, and then list products. That’s fine as far as it goes. But it doesn’t account for dehydration masking as oiliness, a damaged skin barrier mimicking sensitivity, or the very real impact of your local climate, your age, and even your medications on what your skin actually needs.

Skin Type vs. Skin Concerns – The Difference Nobody Explains

This is the gap I noticed in almost every guide I read, and it’s a big one. Your skin type and your skin concerns are two different things, and confusing them leads to routines that only half-work.

Skin type is your genetic baseline – how much sebum your skin produces and how reactive it is. It’s relatively stable (though it does shift, which I’ll get into below).

Skin concerns are the specific issues you’re dealing with right now: acne, hyperpigmentation, fine lines, texture, dark spots, redness. These change based on what’s happening in your life, your environment, and your current routine.

Here’s why this matters: you can have oily skin and still struggle with dehydration. You can have dry skin and still get hormonal breakouts along your jawline. You can have normal skin and still deal with sun damage and melasma. If you only shop based on skin type labels, you miss half the picture.

When I finally understood this distinction, I stopped buying “oily skin” sets and started building my routine ingredient by ingredient – choosing a hydrating serum for my dehydration concern and a lightweight, oil-free moisturizer for my combination skin type. The two things worked together instead of fighting each other.

I spent years treating my skin type when I should have been addressing my skin concerns too. The moment I separated the two, my routine finally clicked.

The Five Skin Types (and What I Got Wrong About Each)

Oily Skin

Oily skin produces more sebum than average. It tends to look shiny – sometimes within an hour of washing – and is associated with enlarged pores, blackheads, and breakouts. What I didn’t know until my second dermatologist visit: oily skin tends to show signs of aging more slowly because the extra sebum provides natural moisture and a layer of protection. So it’s not all bad.

Common triggers that increase oiliness: humidity, stress hormones (cortisol specifically increases sebum production), over-cleansing (which strips the barrier and signals your skin to produce even more oil), hormonal fluctuations, and certain medications.

Dry Skin

Dry skin produces less sebum than it needs. It can feel tight, rough, or flaky, and it looks dull when untreated. Fine lines and wrinkles tend to show up more visibly on dry skin because there’s less natural lubrication. Dry skin is more vulnerable to environmental damage, including UV exposure and pollution, because the lipid barrier is thinner.

What most guides miss: dry skin is a skin type (genetic, consistent). Dehydrated skin is a skin condition (temporary, caused by external factors). I’ll break down the difference in the next section because I confused these two for years.

Normal Skin

Normal skin has a well-balanced sebum production – not too oily, not too dry. Pores are small, texture is even, and sensitivity is minimal. What surprised me when talking to my derm is that normal skin still needs a routine. Skipping sunscreen and moisturizer because your skin “seems fine” is one of the quickest ways to develop premature sun damage, which shows up as uneven tone and texture in your 30s and 40s.

Combination Skin

Combination skin shows two or more skin type characteristics in different zones. The classic pattern is an oily T-zone (forehead, nose, chin) with dry or normal cheeks. This is actually the most common skin type, and it’s the one I have. What I wasn’t expecting: combination skin often gets mistyped as just “oily” because the T-zone is what you notice first, especially if you’re checking your face in bathroom lighting.

The approach that works: multi-zone care. Use lighter, mattifying products on the T-zone and richer, hydrating products on the cheeks and jawline. Yes, this means using different products on different parts of your face. It sounds high-maintenance, but it takes an extra 20 seconds.

Sensitive Skin

Sensitive skin reacts more strongly to products, environmental stressors, and sometimes even water temperature. Reactions can include redness, stinging, burning, itching, or flaking. Sensitivity exists on a spectrum – some people react to one or two triggers, others seem reactive to almost everything.

Over time, I also noticed that my skin became a lot more sensitive. Products that never used to bother me suddenly started causing redness, especially around my cheeks and nose. I would wash my face and within minutes my skin looked flushed. That’s when I realized I wasn’t just dealing with “oily” or “combination” skin — I was dealing with sensitivity too. On days when my redness is more noticeable, I use the Erborian CC Cream to help balance my skin tone. It evens everything out without feeling heavy, and it doesn’t irritate my skin the way some foundations do.

What most guides overlook: sensitivity can be intrinsic (genetic, you’ve always been reactive) or acquired (caused by over-exfoliation, retinoid overuse, a compromised skin barrier, or allergic reactions). The fix for each is different. Intrinsic sensitivity needs ingredient avoidance and gentle formulations. Acquired sensitivity often resolves by pulling back your routine and repairing the skin barrier first.

Dehydrated vs. Dry Skin – The Mistake I Made for Years

This is the section I wish existed in every skin type guide, because it would have saved me a lot of frustration and wasted money.

Dry skin is a skin type. It means your skin genetically produces less oil. You’ve probably always had it.

Dehydrated skin is a temporary condition. It means your skin lacks water – not oil. Any skin type can be dehydrated, including oily skin. And here’s the trap: dehydrated oily skin often produces more oil to compensate for the water loss, which makes it look even oilier. So you reach for more oil-control products, strip the skin further, and the cycle gets worse.

Signs of dehydration include skin that feels tight but still looks shiny, fine lines that appear more pronounced than usual (especially around the eyes and mouth), foundation that looks patchy within hours, and skin that “drinks up” moisturizer immediately.

I spent three years treating what I thought was oily skin with mattifying cleansers and oil-free everything. My skin was actually dehydrated combination – it needed water-binding ingredients like hyaluronic acid and glycerin, not more oil stripping. When I added a hydrating serum underneath my lightweight moisturizer, the excess oil calmed down within two weeks. That was a turning point.

How to Determine Your Skin Type at Home – 3 Methods

  1. Method 1: The Bare-Face Test (30 Minutes)

    Wash your face with a gentle, fragrance-free cleanser. Pat dry with a clean towel – don’t rub. Apply nothing – no serum, moisturizer, SPF, or toner. Wait 30 minutes.

    After 30 minutes, examine your skin in natural light (not bathroom fluorescents, which distort what you see). Check your forehead, nose, chin, and both cheeks separately. If your entire face looks shiny, you likely have oily skin. If it feels tight, rough, or flaky, that points to dry skin. If your T-zone is shiny but your cheeks feel tight or normal, that’s combination. If everything feels comfortable and balanced, that’s normal skin. If you see redness, feel stinging, or notice irritation, that indicates sensitivity.

  2. Method 2: The Blotting Sheet Test

    Follow the same cleansing and 30-minute waiting period as Method 1. Then press a clean blotting sheet (or a single-ply tissue) against your forehead, hold for 10 seconds, and remove. Repeat with a fresh sheet on your nose, left cheek, right cheek, and chin.

    Hold each sheet to a light source. Heavy oil saturation on all sheets suggests oily skin. Little to no oil on any sheet suggests dry skin. Oil mainly from the forehead and nose with dry cheeks suggests combination skin. Minimal, even oil across all sheets suggests normal skin. This method doesn’t test for sensitivity – you’ll need to assess that separately by tracking your reactions to products and environmental changes.

  3. Method 3: The 12-Hour Tracking Method (My Recommendation)

    This is the method my dermatologist actually recommended, and it gives a much more accurate picture than the 30-minute tests. On a day you’re staying home, cleanse your face in the morning and apply only a basic, fragrance-free moisturizer and SPF. Then check your skin at four intervals: noon, 3 PM, 6 PM, and before bed.

    At each checkpoint, note how your skin looks and feels in each zone (forehead, nose, cheeks, chin, jawline). Is it shiny? Tight? Comfortable? Red? Write it down or take a photo in the same lighting. By the end of the day, you’ll have a pattern that tells you much more than a single 30-minute snapshot. This is how I finally caught that my cheeks were dry while my T-zone was oily – something the quick tests missed because both zones looked “fine” at the 30-minute mark.

  4. Method 4: The Pinch Test for Dehydration

    Here’s a bonus that none of the standard guides include, but it’s useful: gently pinch the skin on the back of your hand or on your cheek. If the skin springs back immediately, your hydration is fine. If it takes a moment to bounce back, you may be dehydrated – regardless of your skin type. This isn’t a replacement for the other tests, but it adds a data point that helps you separate “dry skin type” from “dehydrated skin condition.”

Why Your Skin Type Changes (and When to Retest)

Most skin type guides present your results as permanent. They’re not. My skin type shifted noticeably twice – once in my late twenties when hormonal changes reduced my oil production, and again in humid climate when my skin started behaving differently in the dry heat.

Life Stage or Trigger What Typically Happens When to Retest
Puberty (ages 10–17) Sebum production surges due to androgen hormones – skin often becomes oily or acne-prone Every 6 months during this period
20s to early 30s Oil production starts to stabilize; many people shift from oily to combination Once a year
Pregnancy Hormonal shifts can cause increased oiliness, sensitivity, melasma, or acne Each trimester and postpartum
Perimenopause and menopause Estrogen decline reduces sebum – skin tends to become drier, thinner, and more sensitive Every 6 months during transition
New medication Retinoids, hormonal birth control, spironolactone, isotretinoin, antihistamines, and diuretics all alter oil production or hydration 4–6 weeks after starting or stopping
Seasonal shift Skin tends to be oilier in humid summers, drier in cold or arid winters Twice a year (spring and fall)
Climate relocation Moving from humid to dry (or vice versa) can significantly alter oil and hydration balance 6–8 weeks after moving
Chronic stress Cortisol increases sebum production, can trigger breakouts and sensitivity When skin behavior changes noticeably

Table reviewed and updated Feb 2026

The big takeaway: retest your skin type at least once or twice a year, or whenever something significant changes in your body, your environment, or your routine. Sticking to a routine designed for a skin type you no longer have is one of the most common reasons products “stop working.”

Your Skin Barrier and Microbiome – What Most Guides Miss

I noticed that most skin type articles skip this entirely, and it’s a mistake – because your skin barrier health directly affects how your skin type presents itself.

Your skin barrier (sometimes called the moisture barrier or acid mantle) is the outermost layer of your skin. It’s made of lipids, ceramides, and dead skin cells packed together to keep moisture in and irritants out. When this barrier is healthy, your skin type behaves predictably. When it’s compromised – from over-exfoliation, harsh cleansers, too many active ingredients at once, or environmental damage – your skin starts misbehaving in ways that mimic a different skin type.

A damaged barrier on oily skin can look like: increased oiliness (the skin overproduces sebum to compensate), sudden sensitivity to products you’ve used for months, and breakouts that don’t respond to acne treatments. A damaged barrier on dry skin can look like: extreme tightness, stinging when you apply anything, and flaking that moisturizer can’t fix.

Your skin microbiome – the ecosystem of bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms living on your skin – also plays a role. A balanced microbiome supports skin health. An imbalanced one can contribute to conditions like acne, eczema, and rosacea. Harsh antibacterial cleansers and over-use of exfoliating acids can disrupt this balance.

Before you try to determine your skin type, make sure your barrier is in decent shape. If you’ve been using a lot of active ingredients or your skin has been unusually reactive lately, pull back to basics – a gentle cleanser, a ceramide-rich moisturizer, and SPF – for two to four weeks. Then test your skin type. You’ll get a much more accurate result.

Building a Routine by Skin Type – Ingredients That Actually Work

This is where I wanted to go deeper than the usual “use a gentle cleanser” advice. Here are the specific ingredients that made a real difference for me and that my dermatologist consistently recommends, organized by skin type.

Skin Type Cleanser Key Actives Moisturizer Style Watch Out For
Oily Gel or foaming (not stripping); salicylic acid 1–2% if acne-prone Niacinamide (regulates oil), BHA (unclogs pores), zinc PCA Lightweight gel-cream, oil-free Over-cleansing, skipping moisturizer, heavy occlusives
Dry Cream or oil-based; no sulfates Hyaluronic acid (draws water), ceramides (barrier repair), squalane Rich cream with occlusives like shea butter or petrolatum Foaming cleansers, alcohol-based toners, over-exfoliating
Normal Gentle gel or milk cleanser Antioxidants (vitamin C, vitamin E), peptides, moderate retinol Medium-weight lotion or cream Complacency – normal skin still needs SPF and antioxidants
Combination Gentle gel cleanser; avoid anything too rich or too stripping Niacinamide (balancing), hyaluronic acid, AHA/BHA in T-zone only Lightweight on T-zone, richer cream on cheeks (multi-zone approach) Using one product everywhere; treating as just “oily” or just “dry”
Sensitive Fragrance-free, sulfate-free micellar water or cream cleanser Centella asiatica (calming), allantoin, colloidal oatmeal, ceramides Fragrance-free, minimal-ingredient barrier cream Fragrance, essential oils, high-concentration acids, retinol without buffering

A note on morning vs. evening routines: your skin has different needs at different times of day, and most guides skip this. In the morning, focus on protection – antioxidants (vitamin C serum), lightweight moisture, and SPF. In the evening, focus on repair – cleanse thoroughly, apply actives (retinol, AHAs, BHAs), and use a richer moisturizer. This applies across all skin types; the specific products change, but the AM-protect / PM-repair framework stays the same.

Skin Type Considerations in Los Angeles

I live in LA, and the climate here creates some specific skin type challenges that I didn’t see covered in any of the guides I reviewed.

LA has a semi-arid climate with low humidity for most of the year. That means even if you have oily skin, you’re likely dealing with some level of dehydration – especially if you spend a lot of time in air-conditioned spaces. The UV index here is high year-round, so SPF isn’t optional regardless of your skin type. And if you live near a major freeway (as many of us do), pollution exposure can accelerate oxidative damage and contribute to sensitivity.

What I’ve adjusted in my own routine living here: I added a hydrating toner (not astringent – actual hydrating toner with hyaluronic acid) before my serum, I switched to SPF 50 from SPF 30, and I use an antioxidant serum every morning to buffer against pollution. Santa Ana wind season (typically fall through early winter) is particularly drying – I add an extra layer of moisture during those weeks and notice a real difference.

If you’re in a different climate – humid, cold, tropical – your version of these adjustments will look different, but the principle is the same: your local environment affects how your skin type shows up, and your routine should account for that.

Skin Type Comparison: At a Glance

Characteristic Oily Dry Combination Sensitive Normal
Sebum production High Low High in T-zone, low elsewhere Varies Balanced
Pore size Enlarged, visible Small, tight Larger in T-zone Varies Small, barely visible
Common concerns Acne, blackheads, shine Flaking, tightness, visible lines Oily T-zone + dry cheeks Redness, stinging, irritation Minimal; mostly maintenance
Aging tendency Slower visible aging Earlier fine lines Mixed Redness-related aging Average
Biggest routine mistake Over-stripping oil Not enough occlusion One-size-fits-all approach Too many actives at once Skipping SPF
Dehydration risk High (often masked by oil) High Moderate to high High (barrier issues) Low to moderate

Who Should Take a Skin Type Test

If you’ve never formally tested your skin type – even if you “just know” – it’s worth doing at least once with a structured method. I was certain I had oily skin for a decade, and I was wrong.

If your products have “stopped working” – this is almost always a sign that your skin type has shifted, your barrier is compromised, or you’re treating a concern (like dehydration) as if it were your type (oily).

If you’ve recently gone through a hormonal change – starting or stopping birth control, pregnancy, postpartum, perimenopause – retest. Hormones are one of the biggest drivers of skin type shifts.

If you’ve moved to a new climate – your skin adapts to your environment over 6–8 weeks. Give it time, then retest.

If you’re building a routine from scratch – knowing your accurate skin type before you buy anything will save you from the trial-and-error spending cycle that I went through.

5 Skin Type Myths I Believed (Until I Didn’t)

Myth 1 – “Oily skin doesn’t need moisturizer.”

Reality – Skipping moisturizer on oily skin signals your skin to produce more oil. A lightweight, oil-free moisturizer actually helps regulate sebum. Every skin type needs hydration.

Myth 2- “Your skin type never changes.”

Reality- Skin type shifts with age, hormones, medication, climate, and barrier health. I’ve personally experienced two distinct shifts in my adult life.

Myth 3- “Sensitive skin is just a personality trait – everyone thinks their skin is sensitive.”

Reality- Research suggests roughly 40–60% of people report some degree of skin sensitivity. It’s real, it’s measurable (dermatologists can assess barrier function and reactivity), and it ranges from mild to severe.

Myth 4- “You need different products for morning and evening just because of your skin type.”

Reality- The AM/PM difference isn’t about your skin type – it’s about function. Morning is for protection (antioxidants, SPF). Evening is for repair (actives, richer moisture). This principle applies to all five skin types.

Myth 5- “If a product burns, it means it’s working.”

Reality- Burning, stinging, or persistent redness is almost always a sign of irritation or a compromised barrier – not efficacy. A slight tingle from an active ingredient is one thing; pain is your skin telling you to stop.

When to See a Dermatologist Instead of Self-Diagnosing

Self-testing is a great starting point, but there are situations where it’s not enough. I’d recommend seeing a board-certified dermatologist if:

Your skin is persistently reactive – if you’ve stripped your routine down to basics and your skin is still red, stinging, or breaking out after four weeks, something deeper may be going on (rosacea, eczema, contact dermatitis, fungal issues).

You notice sudden changes – a rapid shift in oil production, unexpected breakouts in new areas, or new patches of dryness can signal hormonal changes, thyroid issues, or allergic reactions that a skin type quiz can’t catch.

Over-the-counter products aren’t helping – if you’ve correctly identified your skin type, built an appropriate routine, and still aren’t seeing improvement after 6–8 weeks of consistent use, a derm can offer prescription-strength options and professional assessment.

You’re dealing with a specific condition – acne, rosacea, psoriasis, eczema, and melasma are skin concerns that require targeted treatment beyond what skin-type-based product selection can provide.

A dermatologist can also do a professional skin analysis that goes beyond what you can assess at home – including evaluating your barrier function, sebum levels, and UV damage with specialized tools.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can your skin type change from oily to dry?

Yes. Skin type shifts are common, especially during hormonal transitions like menopause (when estrogen decline reduces oil production), after starting certain medications (isotretinoin, retinoids), or when moving to a drier climate. I’d recommend retesting whenever you notice a sustained change in how your skin behaves.

What’s the difference between dehydrated skin and dry skin?

Dry skin is a skin type – your skin genetically produces less oil. Dehydrated skin is a temporary condition where your skin lacks water, not oil. You can have oily, dehydrated skin at the same time. Dehydrated skin often looks shiny but feels tight, and fine lines appear more pronounced. Hydrating ingredients like hyaluronic acid and glycerin address dehydration; occlusives and emollients address dryness.

How often should I retest my skin type?

At minimum, once or twice a year – ideally at the seasonal shifts (spring and fall). You should also retest after any major hormonal change (starting or stopping birth control, pregnancy, menopause), after moving to a new climate, or after starting a new medication that affects the skin.

Is combination skin the same as normal skin?

No. Normal skin has balanced oil production across the entire face with no persistent concerns. Combination skin has distinctly different behavior in different zones – typically an oily T-zone with dry or normal cheeks. The care approaches are different: normal skin can use the same products everywhere, while combination skin benefits from a multi-zone approach.

Can I have sensitive skin and oily skin at the same time?

Yes. Sensitivity isn’t tied to oil production – it describes how reactive your skin is. You can be oily and sensitive, dry and sensitive, or any other combination. In fact, sensitivity can be triggered by over-treating oily skin with harsh products, which damages the barrier and creates reactivity that wasn’t there before.

Does diet affect skin type?

Diet doesn’t change your underlying genetic skin type, but it can influence how your skin behaves. High-glycemic foods and dairy have been linked in some studies to increased sebum production and acne. Adequate water intake supports hydration. Omega-3 fatty acids may help with barrier function. But these are modifiers, not skin type determinants.

What is the skin barrier and why does it matter for skin typing?

Your skin barrier is the outermost protective layer made of lipids, ceramides, and skin cells. When it’s intact, your skin type shows up accurately. When it’s damaged – from over-exfoliation, harsh cleansers, or environmental stress – your skin can mimic a different type (oily skin may seem more oily, normal skin may suddenly seem sensitive). Repairing your barrier first gives you the most accurate skin type reading.

Do I need to see a dermatologist to know my skin type?

For most people, the at-home methods described above are sufficient. However, if your skin is persistently problematic despite using products matched to your type, or if you suspect a condition like rosacea, eczema, or fungal acne, a board-certified dermatologist can provide professional assessment with tools that go beyond what you can see at home.

How does sunscreen choice differ by skin type?

Every skin type needs broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher. For oily skin, look for lightweight, mattifying, or gel-based formulas. For dry skin, choose moisturizing sunscreens with added hydrators. For sensitive skin, mineral (zinc oxide or titanium dioxide) sunscreens tend to be less irritating than chemical filters. For combination skin, a lightweight fluid that absorbs well everywhere works best.

What’s the Fitzpatrick scale and how does it relate to skin type?

The Fitzpatrick scale classifies skin by its response to UV exposure (how easily you burn vs. tan) on a scale from Type I (very fair, always burns) to Type VI (deeply pigmented, rarely burns). It’s separate from the oily/dry/combination skin type system but matters for skincare because it affects your sun damage risk, hyperpigmentation tendency, and which treatments (like lasers or chemical peels) are safe for your skin tone.

Final Verdict

Learning how to determine your skin type accurately was the foundation that made everything else in my skincare routine fall into place. But the key word there is accurately – and that means going beyond the quick 30-minute test that every guide defaults to. As of Feb 2026, I still use the 12-hour tracking method every time I retest, and I retest twice a year.

The biggest gaps I see in most skin type guides are the ones that cost people the most time and money: confusing dehydration with oily skin, not understanding that skin type changes over time, ignoring the role of the skin barrier, and treating skin type as the only variable when skin concerns need their own separate attention.

If you take one thing from this post, let it be this – identify your type, but don’t stop there. Factor in your hydration, your barrier health, your climate, your life stage, and your specific concerns. That’s when a routine stops being generic and starts actually working for you.

And that’s really what Layers of Beauty is about. It’s not just about buying better products — it’s about understanding yourself better. Your skin will change. Your body will change. Your style will evolve. The goal isn’t perfection; it’s awareness. When you understand what your skin actually needs, you stop chasing trends and start building routines that support you long-term.

If this post helped you, you might also want to read:

• My Morning Skincare Routine (how I layer products for my skin type)
• My Rhode Caffeine Reset Review (how I handle puffiness and sensitivity)
• My Maybelline Sky High Mascara Colors Guide (because makeup sits better when your skin is balanced)
• My Fashion Tips for Easy, Everyday Style (because confidence is layered — skincare, style, and mindset all work together)

 

About the Author: Jasmine Del Toro

LA Lifestyle Blogger

I write about skincare, beauty, and wellness from Los Angeles. Everything I recommend is something I’ve personally tested, usually for longer than I planned to. Follow Layers of Beauty for more authentic reviews and beauty routines.

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