La Roche-Posay Effaclar Medicated Gel Cleanser
La Roche-Posay
Medicinal daily cleanser with salicylic acid for pore congestion and recurring blemishes.
By goal
Dark spots (hyperpigmentation) come from excess melanin, often triggered by sun, acne, or inflammation. Fading them takes two things: pigment-targeting actives like vitamin C and niacinamide, and relentless daily sunscreen, since UV undoes your progress.
Here is a routine built to even out tone and prevent new spots. It takes patience (often 12 to 24 weeks). Personalize it with the quiz.
Apply in this order, thinnest to thickest. Tap any product to view it on Amazon, or take the quiz to swap picks to your goals and budget.
La Roche-Posay
Medicinal daily cleanser with salicylic acid for pore congestion and recurring blemishes.
The Ordinary
4.5 (775)
Pigment-focused treatment blend for uneven tone and post-breakout marks.
Neutrogena
4.6 (92,428)
Gel-cream texture for users who want quick absorption and a fresh finish under SPF.
Neutrogena
Hydrating eye gel-cream option for puffiness and tired under-eye appearance.
Hada Labo
Hydration-first Japanese lotion-toner style step for plumper, softer skin feel.
La Roche-Posay
4.7 (8,112)
High-protection fluid sunscreen that spreads quickly and layers well over treatment routines.
Want this tuned to you? Build my routine →
Consistency plus the right actives: vitamin C and niacinamide for tone, a retinoid or exfoliating acid for turnover, and daily SPF to stop new pigment. Prescription options work faster for stubborn spots.
Usually sun exposure. Without daily broad-spectrum SPF, UV re-triggers melanin and undoes the fading, so sunscreen is non-negotiable for hyperpigmentation.