Facial redness is one of the most common skin concerns and one of the trickiest — because the causes vary and the wrong treatment can make it significantly worse. Here's how to navigate redness treatment at med spas.
Understanding the cause of your redness
Facial redness is not one condition — it's a symptom of several different underlying issues:
Rosacea
A chronic inflammatory skin condition characterized by:
- Subtype 1 (erythematotelangiectatic): Persistent central facial redness, easy flushing, visible broken capillaries
- Subtype 2 (papulopustular): Acne-like bumps plus redness; mistaken for acne
- Subtype 3 (phymatous): Skin thickening, enlarged pores, most commonly affecting the nose (rhinophyma)
- Subtype 4 (ocular): Eye irritation, eyelid changes
What triggers rosacea flares: Heat, sun, alcohol, spicy food, exercise, stress, temperature changes. Management involves avoiding triggers + targeted treatment.
Telangiectasias (broken capillaries)
Permanently dilated superficial blood vessels visible as thin red or purple lines, typically on the cheeks and nose. Common with:
- Rosacea
- Chronic sun damage
- Physical pressure (nose blowing)
- Genetics
Post-inflammatory erythema (PIE)
The persistent red-pink discoloration that remains after inflammatory acne lesions heal. PIE is vascular (not melanin), which means it responds to vascular-targeting treatments differently from PIH (brown post-inflammatory discoloration).
Diffuse flushing without persistent redness
May reflect rosacea, hormonal changes, or other systemic triggers rather than structural vascular changes. Vascular lasers treat structural changes, not the flushing reflex itself.
The key contraindication: what makes redness worse
Before treating redness, understand that several common treatments worsen it:
Treatments to avoid in rosacea or reactive skin:
- High-acid peels (strong glycolic, TCA): Inflammatory and acidic — worsen rosacea flares
- Physical scrubs or abrasive exfoliants: Trigger inflammation
- Microneedling without care: Can flare rosacea during the inflammatory healing phase; not contraindicated but requires a calming protocol
- IPL at inappropriate settings for skin tone: Can worsen redness or cause burns
What to use instead:
- Gentle, barrier-supporting skincare: Ceramides, niacinamide, azelaic acid (anti-inflammatory)
- Mandelic acid (gentler exfoliant that doesn't significantly worsen redness)
- Laser treatments (vascular-targeted) are the effective rosacea treatment — the inflammatory cascade of the disease is addressed through chronic management + targeted laser when appropriate
Treatment options for facial redness
IPL / BBL (broadband light)
The most commonly available redness treatment at med spas. Broad-spectrum light with vascular filters targets oxyhemoglobin in dilated vessels.
Best for:
- Diffuse facial redness (rosacea subtype 1)
- Visible telangiectasias
- Combined brown spots + redness (dual-concern patients)
The mechanism: Light absorbed by oxyhemoglobin heats the vessel wall, causes micro-damage, and the vessel is reabsorbed by the body. Multiple sessions are needed as new vessels can form.
Sessions: 3–5 sessions for rosacea redness, spaced 3–4 weeks apart.
Fitzpatrick safety: IPL is appropriate for Fitzpatrick I–III; Fitzpatrick IV–VI requires experienced providers and appropriate settings. The risk is non-target melanin absorption causing PIH.
Cost: $300–$600 per session.
Pulsed dye laser (PDL) — V-Beam
A 595 nm laser specifically targeting oxyhemoglobin — more wavelength-specific than IPL's broad-spectrum approach.
Advantages over IPL:
- More precise targeting of vasculature
- Effective for discrete telangiectasias, port wine stains, and persistent red scars
- Considered the reference standard for vascular skin lesions
The purpura question: Classic PDL settings cause purpura (bruising-like discoloration lasting 7–14 days) as the vessel is destroyed. Modern "pulsed" settings reduce purpura at the cost of needing more sessions.
Best for:
- Discrete visible broken capillaries (especially on the nose)
- Red scars and PIE (post-acne redness)
- Port wine stains and hemangiomas
Cost: $350–$700 per session.
Nd:YAG 1064 nm laser
Longer wavelength that penetrates deeper into the skin — reaches larger, deeper vessels not accessible with IPL or PDL.
Best for:
- Larger blue/purple vessels (leg telangiectasias when used appropriately)
- Deeper facial vessels
- Darker skin tones — the 1064 nm wavelength is absorbed less by melanin, making it safer in Fitzpatrick IV–VI
Limitations: Less effective for diffuse fine redness compared to PDL or IPL.
Excel V (532 nm + 1064 nm combination)
A combination laser platform that allows treatment with both wavelengths — 532 nm for superficial vessels and 1064 nm for deeper vessels — in one device. Used at many dermatology and advanced med spa practices.
Laser comparison for redness
| Laser | Wavelength | Best for | Fitzpatrick safety | Downtime |
|---|
| IPL/BBL | Broad-spectrum | Diffuse redness + brown | I–III standard | 2–5 days flushing |
| PDL (V-Beam) | 595 nm | Discrete vessels, red scars | I–IV (with care) | 7–14 days purpura (classic) or 1–3 days (gentle) |
| Nd:YAG | 1064 nm | Deeper vessels, darker skin | I–VI | Minimal |
| Excel V | 532+1064 nm | Broad vascular range | I–IV | Varies by setting |
Topical treatments for redness
While lasers treat structural vascular changes, topicals manage ongoing inflammation and flushing:
Prescription:
- Azelaic acid 15–20%: Anti-inflammatory, reduces rosacea redness and bumps
- Metronidazole gel: Reduces rosacea-associated inflammation and papules
- Ivermectin 1% cream (Soolantra): For papulopustular rosacea; targets the Demodex mite association
- Brimonidine (Mirvaso): Alpha-agonist vasoconstrictor — reduces redness within 30 minutes; wears off in 8–12 hours; rebound redness is a documented effect in some patients
OTC:
- Niacinamide: Anti-inflammatory; reduces barrier disruption; broad safety profile
- Centella asiatica: Calming; often in "cica" products
- Green tea extract: Antioxidant with mild anti-inflammatory properties
Managing rosacea long-term
Rosacea is a chronic condition — it's managed, not cured. A sustainable plan:
- Identify and minimize triggers — keep a trigger diary for 2–4 weeks
- Establish a gentle skincare baseline — minimal actives, barrier-focused, consistent SPF
- Medical management — discuss prescription topicals with a dermatologist for papulopustular rosacea
- Laser treatment — 1–2 courses per year of IPL or PDL to address vascular component
- Maintenance — annual IPL prevents progression; untreated rosacea typically worsens over time
Questions to ask before treating redness
- Do I have rosacea, or are my vessels from sun damage? (These may have different management implications)
- Is IPL appropriate for my skin tone, or would PDL be safer?
- Do I have any lesions that should be evaluated by a dermatologist (including any port wine stain or unusual vascular pattern)?
- What skincare ingredients should I avoid with rosacea-prone skin?
- What is the realistic level of clearance I can expect, and how often would I need maintenance treatments?
Looking for redness treatment providers? Browse skincare providers on MedSpot →