Quick Comparison
| Benzoyl Peroxide | Green Tea Extract (EGCG) | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Concentrations: 2.5%, 5%, 10%. 2.5% is as effective as 10% for most people with significantly less irritation. Apply as a thin layer to acne-prone areas. Short-contact therapy (apply for 5-10 minutes then rinse) reduces irritation while maintaining efficacy. Bleaches fabrics — use white towels and pillowcases. | Topical: 1-5% green tea extract in formulations. Look for products with EGCG specifically listed. Oral: 400-800 mg green tea extract (standardized to EGCG) daily. Apply topical products before sunscreen for additional photoprotection. |
| Application | Topical (wash, gel, cream, spot treatment). Short-contact therapy: apply 2.5% for 5-10 minutes, then rinse — reduces irritation while maintaining antibacterial activity. | Topical (serum, cream, toner) or oral (supplement, tea). Topical is effective for localized skin benefits. |
| Research Papers | 9 papers | 9 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Benzoyl Peroxide
Benzoyl peroxide decomposes on skin, generating benzoic acid and reactive oxygen species (peroxyl and hydroxyl radicals). Cutibacterium acnes is an obligate anaerobe thriving in oxygen-depleted follicles; BPO-derived oxygen creates an aerobic environment while free radicals cause non-specific oxidative damage to bacterial membranes, proteins, and DNA. Because this does not target a specific bacterial pathway (unlike antibiotics), C. acnes cannot develop resistance—BPO remains effective indefinitely. Mild comedolytic activity through oxidative effects on follicular keratin. Anti-inflammatory effects from neutrophil modulation. 2.5% achieves similar bacterial kill to 10% with less irritation.
Green Tea Extract (EGCG)
EGCG scavenges ROS (superoxide, hydroxyl radical, peroxynitrite) and chelates iron/copper that catalyze Fenton reactions. Inhibits MMP-2 (gelatinase A) and MMP-9 (gelatinase B) that degrade collagen types I, III, IV and elastin in photoaged skin — these enzymes are UV-upregulated via AP-1 and NF-kappa B. Reduces sebum by inhibiting 5-alpha reductase type 1 (testosterone to DHT conversion in sebaceous glands). Anti-inflammatory: NF-kappa B inhibition (I-kappa B degradation prevention), COX-2 suppression, TNF-alpha/IL-1beta reduction. Promotes keratinocyte differentiation via involucrin and filaggrin upregulation. Catechol structure enables dual antioxidant and metal-chelating activity. Topical EGCG reduces UV-induced erythema and prevents collagen degradation when used before sun exposure.
Risks & Safety
Benzoyl Peroxide
Common
Dryness, peeling, redness, bleaching of hair, towels, and clothing.
Serious
Allergic contact dermatitis (uncommon but can be severe — patch test first).
Rare
Severe allergic reaction with swelling.
Green Tea Extract (EGCG)
Serious
None topically. Oral high-dose EGCG supplements have rare liver toxicity reports.
Rare
Contact dermatitis.
Full Profiles
Benzoyl Peroxide →
The most effective OTC acne treatment and one of the few topical treatments that kills acne-causing bacteria (C. acnes) without promoting antibiotic resistance. Benzoyl peroxide works through oxidation — it releases oxygen into pores, creating an environment where anaerobic bacteria cannot survive. It is one of three first-line acne treatments (alongside adapalene and salicylic acid) recommended by dermatological guidelines.
Green Tea Extract (EGCG) →
Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) is the primary polyphenol in green tea and one of the most potent topical antioxidants. It has been shown to reduce UV damage, decrease sebum production, reduce inflammation, and inhibit the enzymes that break down collagen and elastin. Green tea extract is one of the few antioxidants with evidence for both topical and oral skin benefits.