Quick Comparison

Azelaic AcidRosehip Seed Oil
Typical ConcentrationOTC: 10% (The Ordinary). Prescription: 15% gel (Finacea for rosacea), 20% cream (Azelex for acne). Apply twice daily. Well-tolerated but may sting/itch initially. Full effects at 8-12 weeks.Apply 2-4 drops in the evening after water-based serums. Can be used morning (under sunscreen) but the natural retinoid content makes PM use preferred. Cold-pressed, unrefined oil is orange-red. Goes rancid relatively quickly — store in fridge and use within 3-6 months.
ApplicationTopical (gel, cream, serum). Slightly gritty texture in some formulations. Apply to clean skin.Topical (pure oil). Apply 2-4 drops as last step of PM routine. Cold-pressed, unrefined.
Research Papers9 papers5 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Azelaic Acid

Azelaic acid exhibits multi-modal activity: (1) Tyrosinase inhibition—competitively inhibits tyrosinase selectively in hyperactive melanocytes (melasma, PIH) while sparing normal ones; may involve mitochondrial enzyme interference in dysregulated melanocytes. (2) Antimicrobial—bacteriostatic against Cutibacterium acnes by inhibiting bacterial protein synthesis. (3) Comedolytic—normalizes follicular keratinization, reducing hyperkeratinization and corneocyte cohesion; may modulate keratinocyte differentiation. (4) Anti-inflammatory—scavenges ROS, inhibits neutrophil free radicals, reduces pro-inflammatory cytokines. Inhibits 5-alpha-reductase in sebocytes, potentially reducing sebum. Multi-pathway activity explains efficacy in acne, rosacea, and hyperpigmentation. Safe during pregnancy.

Rosehip Seed Oil

Natural trans-retinoic acid content (0.01-0.04%) binds RAR receptors in keratinocytes and fibroblasts, promoting cell turnover, collagen type I synthesis, and keratinocyte differentiation at gentle level without retinization. Linoleic acid (44%) supports barrier repair through ceramide synthesis, balances sebum composition (acne-prone skin often deficient). Alpha-linolenic acid (33%) converts to anti-inflammatory metabolites, supports barrier function. Beta-carotene and lycopene provide antioxidant protection and mild photoprotection. Unique combination among plant oils: natural retinoid plus essential fatty acids plus antioxidants — no other oil provides all three. Contains tocopherols. Quickly absorbed. Clinical use: scars, hyperpigmentation, fine lines — subtle but measurable anti-aging effects compared to inert oils.

Risks & Safety

Azelaic Acid

Common

Stinging, burning, itching on initial application (usually subsides within 2 weeks). Mild dryness.

Serious

None. Safe during pregnancy and breastfeeding.

Rare

Allergic contact dermatitis, hypopigmentation (rare at cosmetic concentrations).

Rosehip Seed Oil

Common

May cause breakouts in oily/acne-prone skin. Goes rancid quickly if not stored properly.

Serious

None.

Rare

Allergic reaction (rose family).

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