A practical guide to rosacea treatment at med spas — which procedures help with redness and broken vessels, what to avoid, realistic expectations, and how to build an effective plan.
· By MedSpot Editorial · 5 min read
Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin condition — not sun damage, not acne, and not something that most over-the-counter products adequately address. Med spa treatments can meaningfully reduce redness, visible vessels, and flushing, but only when the approach is appropriate for the specific rosacea subtype and triggers.
Rosacea is not one condition — it has four recognized clinical subtypes, and treatments differ based on which is present:
| Subtype | Primary features | Best treated by |
|---|---|---|
| Erythematotelangiectatic (ETR) | Persistent redness, flushing, visible blood vessels | Laser/light treatments |
| Papulopustular | Redness + acne-like bumps | Medical (metronidazole, ivermectin, azelaic acid) + laser |
| Phymatous | Skin thickening, especially nose (rhinophyma) | CO2 laser, surgical resurfacing |
| Ocular | Eye redness, irritation, sensitivity | Ophthalmology + oral antibiotics |
Most people who seek med spa treatment have subtype 1 (ETR) or a combination of 1 and 2. Laser and light treatments are most appropriate for vascular and redness components. Medical management (prescription topicals or oral medications) is essential for papulopustular subtype.
PDL (595 nm) is the gold standard for vascular rosacea. The wavelength specifically targets oxyhemoglobin — the red pigment in blood — causing blood vessels to coagulate and collapse. The body reabsorbs the vessel over 2–4 weeks.
What PDL treats:
Sessions: 3–5, spaced 4–6 weeks apart; maintenance as needed.
Downtime: PDL commonly causes purpura — bruise-like discoloration that lasts 1–2 weeks. This is expected and indicates effective energy delivery. Some providers use lower fluence settings for no-purpura protocols, which have less downtime but may require more sessions.
Cost: $400–$1,200 per session.
IPL addresses both redness and mild pigmentation simultaneously, making it useful for rosacea patients who also have photodamage. It's less targeted than PDL for pure vascular work but works well for the diffuse redness and blotchiness pattern common in ETR rosacea.
Important caveat: IPL must be used at appropriate settings for rosacea — high fluence settings designed for aggressive pigment treatment can trigger a rosacea flare. Always confirm your provider has experience treating rosacea specifically with IPL, not just photodamage.
Sessions: 3–5, 3–4 weeks apart.
Skin tone consideration: IPL has lower safety margins for darker skin tones. For patients with Fitzpatrick IV–VI skin and rosacea, PDL or Nd:YAG laser is safer.
Cost: $200–$600 per session.
Nd:YAG targets deeper, larger vessels and is preferred for larger visible vessels, patients with darker skin tones, or patients who need a more skin-tone-safe option.
Best for: Larger telangiectasias, leg veins (though leg veins are typically sclerotherapy), darker skin tones.
Cost: $300–$800 per session.
Excel V by Cutera is a dual-wavelength laser combining 532 nm (KTP, similar to PDL for vascular work) and 1064 nm (Nd:YAG for deeper vessels). It's considered a strong option for rosacea treatment — more targeted than IPL, more versatile than single-wavelength PDL alone.
Cost: $400–$1,000 per session.
Red and yellow LED light can reduce inflammation and calm rosacea-affected skin without triggering flares. The effect is modest — LED doesn't eliminate vessels but reduces overall reactivity and inflammation.
Best as: A maintenance and soothing treatment between laser sessions, or for patients who cannot tolerate laser energy. Not a standalone solution for significant rosacea.
Some common treatments are contraindicated or problematic for rosacea:
Chemical peels: Deep or high-acid peels (TCA, higher concentration glycolic) can trigger significant rosacea flares. Mild peels (mandelic acid, low-concentration lactic) with experienced providers may be tolerable, but the skin's impaired barrier function makes it reactive. Disclose rosacea to every provider before any peel.
Microneedling: Mechanical trauma triggers inflammatory response — this can worsen rosacea papulopustular symptoms significantly. RF microneedling generates heat that can increase vascular reactivity. Rosacea is generally a contraindication for microneedling.
IPL at high fluence settings: If settings are aggressive (for standard photodamage treatment), it can worsen rosacea. Settings for rosacea must be gentler and more specific.
Facial massage and steam: Common spa facials with steam, hot towels, and massage are rosacea triggers. A basic spa facial is often more aggravating than relaxing for rosacea skin.
Aggressive extraction: Manual extraction of "acne-like" papulopustular lesions worsens rosacea — these are not comedones and should not be treated like acne.
Helpful ingredients:
Ingredients to avoid:
Rosacea requires ongoing management — there is no cure, and treatments address symptoms without eliminating the underlying tendency to flush and redden.
A realistic approach:
Looking for a provider experienced with rosacea treatment? Browse skincare providers on MedSpot →