Once you know your barrier is compromised, the next question is what to do about it.
The principle is simple: calm first, repair next, then maintain. Your routine should be supportive, not experimental. This isn't the time to introduce new actives or test a trending serum — it's the time to back off and let your skin remember how to heal.
Calm First
When the barrier is broken, your skin is asking for one thing: less aggression. Three priorities while you're in the calming phase:
Keep cleansing gentle. Lukewarm water, a mild non-foaming or low-foaming cleanser, no scrubbing. If your skin is severely irritated, water alone may be enough morning or night.
Moisturise immediately after cleansing. While the skin is still damp. This traps water against the surface and gives the barrier something to work with.
Minimise actives. Pause retinoids, acids, vitamin C, and strong brighteners until things calm down. You can reintroduce them later — slowly, one at a time.
Ingredients That Help Repair the Barrier
Barrier repair formulas should feel comforting, not aggressive — closer to a soft blanket than a treatment punch. The ingredients we look for fall into three groups.
Hydration and barrier lipids
These are the structural components your barrier is missing when it's compromised:
- Ceramides — replenish the barrier's lipid matrix
- Cholesterol — supports the brick-and-mortar structure
- Fatty acids and sphingolipids — the "mortar" between skin cells
- Glycerin, beta-glucan, panthenol — humectants that hold water and ease discomfort
Anti-irritation and soothing
- Panthenol (provitamin B5) — comforting, supports recovery
- Allantoin — calming for stressed skin
- Centella asiatica (madecassoside, asiaticoside) — soothing, well-tolerated by most skin
- Niacinamide — supportive at low to moderate concentrations in gentle formulations
Antioxidants (once skin tolerates them)
Vitamin E derivatives and other antioxidants help protect the skin while the barrier rebuilds. Add these back in only after the calming phase, and only if your skin doesn't react.
What to Avoid
While your barrier is in repair mode, these are the things most likely to set you back:
- Scrubs and harsh exfoliating brushes
- Strong acids — AHAs, BHAs — used more than occasionally
- Retinoids (often too irritating during active barrier breakdown)
- Layering multiple actives at once
- Fragrance-heavy or alcohol-heavy products if they sting
- Hot water cleansing
A Simple Repair Routine
Morning
- Gentle cleanser (or just water if very irritated)
- Moisturiser with barrier-support ingredients — ceramides, panthenol, glycerin
- Sunscreen — choose one that doesn't sting
Night
- Gentle cleanse
- Barrier moisturiser
- Optional: a thicker occlusive layer on top if your skin is very dry or peeling
A compromised barrier reacts faster than healthy skin. Before introducing any new product — even one marketed as gentle — apply a small amount to your inner forearm or behind your ear for two or three days. If there's no reaction, it's safer to use on your face.
Maintaining Your Barrier After Recovery
Once your skin has calmed and the visible signs are gone, the work shifts to staying out of the same trap. Maintenance is mostly about restraint:
- Keep moisturising consistently, even on days when your skin feels fine
- Reintroduce actives slowly. One at a time, with at least two weeks between additions
- Don't over-exfoliate. Once or twice a week is plenty for most people; some skin types don't need it at all
- Keep the routine simple. More steps doesn't mean better skin
One last note for Hong Kong: if you live or work in air-conditioned spaces — which is most of us — moisturise more often than you think you need to. Air-conditioning pulls moisture out of skin even when the air outside feels humid. The skin you have at 7pm after a full day in AC isn't the skin you woke up with.