Quick Comparison

Glycolic AcidKojic Acid
Typical ConcentrationDaily use: 5-10% at pH 3-4. Weekly peel: 10-30%. Professional peel: 30-70%. Start with 5% every other night. Increase concentration/frequency gradually. Always use SPF — AHAs increase sun sensitivity by up to 50%. Buffered formulations are gentler than free acid.Concentrations: 1-4%. Kojic dipalmitate is a more stable ester form but less potent. Apply once or twice daily. Often combined with other brightening agents (arbutin, vitamin C, niacinamide). Results visible at 4-8 weeks.
ApplicationTopical (toner, serum, peel, cleanser). Leave-on products are more effective than wash-off. Apply to dry skin at night.Topical (serum, cream). Store in airtight, opaque packaging. Discard if the product turns brown.
Research Papers9 papers10 papers
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Mechanism of Action

Glycolic Acid

Glycolic acid disrupts ionic bonds between corneocytes (dead skin cells) in the stratum corneum by chelating calcium ions and lowering the calcium concentration at desmosomal junctions. This weakens corneodesmosome integrity and activates endogenous proteases (kallikrein 5 and 7), accelerating desquamation. At higher concentrations, glycolic acid penetrates the viable epidermis and dermis, where it stimulates keratinocyte differentiation and upregulates transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β) signaling in fibroblasts. This promotes glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis, type I and III collagen production via procollagen gene expression, and elastin remodeling. Its small molecular size (76 Da) and high water solubility give it the deepest penetration of any AHA. The exfoliation also improves barrier function over time by promoting proper corneocyte maturation and reducing stratum corneum compaction.

Kojic Acid

Kojic acid (5-hydroxy-2-hydroxymethyl-4H-pyran-4-one) inhibits tyrosinase through copper chelation—tyrosinase is a type-3 copper enzyme requiring two copper ions to catalyze tyrosine to L-DOPA and L-DOPA to dopaquinone. By sequestering copper, kojic acid renders tyrosinase inactive. May also inhibit tyrosinase-related protein-1 (TRP-1). Exhibits direct antioxidant activity, scavenging superoxide and hydroxyl radicals. Relatively unstable—oxidizes with air and light, forming brown degradation products that lose activity; opaque, airtight packaging and low pH improve stability. Kojic dipalmitate is a more stable ester but requires enzymatic cleavage, reducing potency. Contact sensitization can develop with prolonged use.

Risks & Safety

Glycolic Acid

Common

Stinging, redness, peeling, sun sensitivity. Over-exfoliation damages the skin barrier.

Serious

Chemical burns from professional-strength peels without proper protocol.

Rare

Scarring from improper high-concentration use.

Kojic Acid

Common

Contact sensitization (developing an allergy over time with repeated use), redness, irritation.

Serious

Contact dermatitis in sensitized individuals.

Rare

Paradoxical darkening in very sensitive skin types.

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