A comprehensive guide to treating dark spots and uneven pigmentation — how to identify your type (sun damage, melasma, PIH, freckles) and which treatments (laser, IPL, peels, topicals) work for each.
· By MedSpot Editorial · 5 min read
"Dark spots" is not one condition — it's a category that includes several distinct types of pigmentation with different causes and, critically, different treatments. The same procedure that clears sun spots can worsen melasma. Understanding your pigmentation type is the most important first step.
What they look like: Flat, well-defined brown spots; sharp borders; uniform color. Common on sun-exposed areas (face, hands, forearms, chest).
Cause: Cumulative UV exposure causes localized overproduction of melanin.
Key characteristic: Present since childhood or adolescence; more numerous with age; stable (not hormonally driven).
What it looks like: Larger, diffuse, blotchy brown or grey-brown patches, often symmetric. Most common on forehead, cheeks, upper lip, and chin. Can look similar to sun damage but covers larger areas in a more diffuse pattern.
Cause: Hormonal influence (estrogen, progesterone) combined with UV exposure triggers melanocyte overactivity. Common during pregnancy ("mask of pregnancy"), with hormonal contraceptives, and during hormonal changes.
Key characteristic: Hormonally driven and UV-sensitive — it can return or worsen with sun exposure, hormonal changes, or aggressive treatments. This is why it's the most difficult type to treat.
What it looks like: Dark spots where acne, rashes, injuries, or other inflammation previously occurred. Often flat, not raised.
Cause: After skin inflammation, excess melanin is deposited as part of the healing process.
Key characteristic: Location corresponds to prior inflammatory lesions. More common and more persistent in darker skin tones. Often fades on its own over months.
What they look like: Small, flat, light-tan spots that appear in childhood, often concentrated on the nose and cheeks. Darken with sun exposure; fade in winter.
Cause: Genetic tendency to localized melanin overproduction in response to UV.
Key characteristic: Appear early in life, lighten with age, fluctuate seasonally.
What they look like: Waxy, stuck-on appearing raised brown, tan, or black growths. Not flat — slightly elevated.
Cause: Non-cancerous skin growth; not related to sun or hormones specifically; hereditary.
Important: These are benign growths, not pigmentation in the melanin sense. They're removed differently (cryotherapy, laser ablation) and don't respond to pigment-targeted treatments.
Any pigmented lesion that has irregular borders, multiple colors, asymmetry, or is changing should be evaluated by a dermatologist before any cosmetic treatment. This is not a cosmetic consideration — it's medical. Never have a provider treat an unexamined spot with laser or another modality before a proper skin check.
Best options:
The melasma challenge: Melasma responds to treatment but tends to return, especially with sun exposure or hormonal triggers. The goal is management, not cure.
First line (topical):
In-office:
What to avoid for melasma:
Daily non-negotiable: Broad-spectrum SPF 50 (mineral preferred) — without daily sun protection, no melasma treatment is sustainable.
The good news: Most PIH fades on its own over 6–24 months in lighter skin tones; patience + sun protection often is sufficient.
For persistent PIH:
Avoid: IPL and high-fluence laser on active or recent PIH in darker skin — high risk of worsening
Freckles can be lightened with IPL or Q-switched laser if desired, but they will return with sun exposure. This is a maintenance-dependent treatment. Daily SPF significantly slows the re-darkening.
| Skin type (Fitzpatrick) | Safe options | Use with caution | Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| I–III (light) | All options | — | — |
| IV (olive/medium) | Nd:YAG, mild peels, topicals, RF microneedling | IPL (low fluence) | Aggressive IPL, ablative laser |
| V–VI (dark/deep) | Nd:YAG, RF microneedling, topicals | Nothing else without expert guidance | IPL, aggressive peels, ablative laser |
This is the most important consideration for darker skin tones — PIH from inappropriate treatment can be worse and more persistent than the original concern.
Regardless of treatment type:
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