Quick Comparison
| Niacinamide | Salicylic Acid | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Concentrations: 2-10%. 5% is the most studied concentration and provides the best balance of efficacy and tolerability. Higher concentrations (10%) are available but may cause irritation in sensitive skin without proportional benefit. Apply morning and/or night. | Concentrations: 0.5-2% for daily use products (cleansers, toners, serums). Up to 30% for professional peels. Start with 0.5-1% every other day and increase. Leave-on products are more effective than wash-off. For body acne (back, chest): 2% is standard. |
| Application | Topical (serum, moisturizer, toner). Water-soluble. Stable in formulation. Compatible with most actives. | Topical (cleanser, toner, serum, spot treatment, body wash, peel). Leave-on products provide better efficacy than wash-off. |
| Research Papers | 10 papers | 10 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Niacinamide
Niacinamide is converted to NAD+ via the Preiss-Handler pathway—essential for cellular respiration, DNA repair (PARP), and sirtuin regulation. In keratinocytes, it upregulates serine palmitoyltransferase and fatty acid elongases, increasing ceramide synthesis and strengthening the barrier. It inhibits melanosome transfer by downregulating protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) on keratinocytes—brightening without tyrosinase inhibition. In sebocytes, it normalizes lipid synthesis and reduces sebum (possibly via AMPK). Niacinamide inhibits NF-kB translocation, suppressing IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-8. It inhibits phosphodiesterase, increasing cAMP and modulating keratinocyte differentiation. These multi-pathway effects explain broad efficacy across barrier repair, brightening, acne, and anti-aging.
Salicylic Acid
Salicylic acid (ortho-hydroxybenzoic acid) is a lipophilic beta-hydroxy acid—the ortho hydroxyl enables sebum and follicular lipid solubility, unlike water-soluble AHAs. It penetrates the pilosebaceous unit and induces desmolysis: disruption of desmosomal attachments and corneodesmosomes, accelerating desquamation of pore-clogging debris. Inside the follicle, it dissolves sebum and keratin plugs (comedolysis). Salicylic acid inhibits COX-1 and COX-2, reducing prostaglandin synthesis—the same anti-inflammatory mechanism as aspirin—decreasing erythema and swelling. Bacteriostatic against Cutibacterium acnes through membrane disruption and pH reduction. May reduce sebum production. Small size (138 Da) and lipophilicity enable follicular penetration to depths AHAs cannot reach.
Risks & Safety
Niacinamide
Common
Very well-tolerated at 2-5%. Flushing/redness at concentrations above 5% in some individuals.
Serious
None documented.
Rare
Contact dermatitis (uncommon). Old advice to avoid combining with vitamin C is largely debunked at product pH levels.
Salicylic Acid
Common
Dryness, peeling, mild stinging. Over-use can compromise the skin barrier.
Serious
Salicylate sensitivity (rare) — avoid if allergic to aspirin. Not recommended in pregnancy at high concentrations.
Rare
Severe peeling from over-application.
Full Profiles
Niacinamide →
A true multitasker — niacinamide (vitamin B3) addresses almost every skin concern simultaneously. It strengthens the skin barrier by boosting ceramide production, reduces hyperpigmentation by inhibiting melanosome transfer, controls sebum production, minimizes pore appearance, reduces redness, and has anti-aging benefits. One of the most versatile and well-tolerated actives in skincare.
Salicylic Acid →
The only beta-hydroxy acid (BHA) used in skincare. Salicylic acid is oil-soluble, meaning it can penetrate into pores and dissolve the sebum and dead skin that cause blackheads and acne. This makes it fundamentally different from AHAs (which only work on the skin surface). It also has direct anti-inflammatory properties, reducing the redness and swelling of acne lesions.