Quick Comparison
| Niacinamide | Vitamin K | |
|---|---|---|
| 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: 1-5% in eye creams and targeted treatments. Apply to under-eye area and areas with visible blood vessels. Results take 4-8 weeks of consistent use. Phytonadione (vitamin K1) is the most common topical form. |
| Application | Topical (serum, moisturizer, toner). Water-soluble. Stable in formulation. Compatible with most actives. | Topical (eye cream, serum). Apply gently to under-eye area and areas of concern. |
| 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.
Vitamin K
Vitamin K (phytonadione/K1) is cofactor for gamma-glutamyl carboxylase, which carboxylates glutamic acid residues in clotting factors II, VII, IX, X and proteins S, C — essential for calcium binding and coagulation cascade activation. Topically promotes reabsorption of subcutaneous extravasated blood by activating local clotting cascades that convert leaked hemoglobin to biliverdin and bilirubin for clearance. Strengthens capillary walls, reduces vascular permeability. For vascular dark circles: improves vessel wall integrity, reduces hemosiderin deposition. Supports elastic fiber production through matrix Gla protein carboxylation. Has anti-inflammatory effects. Clinical use: bruising, post-procedure ecchymosis, periorbital vascular hyperpigmentation. Results require 4-8 weeks consistent application.
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.
Vitamin K
Common
Essentially none — very well-tolerated.
Serious
None documented topically.
Rare
Allergic contact dermatitis.
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.
Vitamin K →
A fat-soluble vitamin that supports blood clotting and blood vessel integrity. In skincare, vitamin K is primarily used for dark circles under the eyes (caused by visible blood vessels), bruising, spider veins, and post-procedure redness. It strengthens capillary walls and supports the reabsorption of blood that has leaked from damaged vessels. Often combined with retinol and vitamin C in eye creams.