Quick Comparison
| Licorice Root Extract | Vitamin C (L-Ascorbic Acid) | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Concentrations vary; glabridin at 0.1-0.4% is the most active brightening component. Full extract at 1-4%. Apply morning and/or night. Safe for all skin types. Often combined with niacinamide and arbutin for enhanced brightening. | L-Ascorbic Acid: 10-20% at pH 2.5-3.5. Start with 10% if new to vitamin C. Apply in the morning under sunscreen for photoprotective synergy. The SkinCeuticals CE Ferulic formula (15% L-AA + 1% vitamin E + 0.5% ferulic acid) is the most studied and copied formulation. |
| Application | Topical (serum, cream, toner). Very stable in formulation. Compatible with most active ingredients. | Topical (serum, usually water-based). Apply to clean, dry skin in the morning before sunscreen. Store in cool, dark place. Discard when it turns dark yellow or brown. |
| Research Papers | 10 papers | 10 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Licorice Root Extract
Glabridin competitively inhibits tyrosinase by binding copper active site (CuA, CuB), blocking tyrosine to L-DOPA hydroxylation and DOPA to dopaquinone oxidation. Also inhibits tyrosinase-related protein 1 (TRP-1). Liquiritin disperses existing melanin via melanosome transfer inhibition and autophagy pathway upregulation in keratinocytes. Glycyrrhizin inhibits COX-2 and 5-lipoxygenase, reducing prostaglandin and leukotriene production. Multi-mechanism brightening: tyrosinase inhibition, melanin dispersal, anti-inflammation. Unlike hydroquinone, no melanocyte cytotoxicity — suitable for long-term use and all skin tones. Glabridin has free radical scavenging antioxidant activity. Glycyrrhizin's 11-beta-HSD inhibition has minimal systemic effect with topical use.
Vitamin C (L-Ascorbic Acid)
L-Ascorbic acid donates electrons to scavenge reactive oxygen species (superoxide, hydroxyl radical, singlet oxygen) and reactive nitrogen species from UV, pollution, and metabolism—preventing oxidative damage to lipids, proteins, and DNA. It inhibits tyrosinase (copper enzyme catalyzing tyrosine to L-DOPA to dopaquinone) through copper chelation and competitive inhibition. Ascorbate is an essential cofactor for prolyl and lysyl hydroxylase—enzymes that hydroxylate collagen residues for triple-helix formation and lysyl oxidase crosslinking. Vitamin C regenerates oxidized vitamin E, creating a sustained redox cycle. Ferulic acid stabilizes both vitamins; the CE Ferulic combination provides 4-8x greater photoprotection than vitamin C alone. Penetration requires pH 2.5-3.5.
Risks & Safety
Licorice Root Extract
Common
Very well-tolerated.
Serious
None documented topically. Oral licorice (glycyrrhizin) can elevate blood pressure, but topical use does not have this effect.
Rare
Allergic contact dermatitis.
Vitamin C (L-Ascorbic Acid)
Common
Tingling/stinging on application (due to low pH), oxidation of product (turns yellow/brown — discard when this happens).
Serious
None.
Rare
Contact dermatitis, especially with oxidized product. May cause temporary orange staining of skin at high concentrations.
Full Profiles
Licorice Root Extract →
A natural brightening and anti-inflammatory ingredient derived from Glycyrrhiza glabra root. The key actives — glabridin, liquiritin, and glycyrrhizin — inhibit melanin production, reduce inflammation, and soothe irritation. Licorice root is one of the most effective and gentle brightening ingredients available, with lower irritation risk than vitamin C or hydroquinone.
Vitamin C (L-Ascorbic Acid) →
The most potent topical antioxidant with strong clinical evidence for brightening, anti-aging, and photoprotection. L-Ascorbic Acid is the pure, active form that directly neutralizes free radicals, inhibits melanin production, and stimulates collagen synthesis. The challenge is formulation — it is notoriously unstable and must be at low pH (2.5-3.5) for skin penetration, which can cause irritation.