laser-skin-treatments-guide

Main Navigation

The Definitive Guide to Laser Skin Treatments

Lasers are some of the most powerful and versatile tools in skin treatment. They can resurface ageing skin, fade stubborn hyperpigmentation, calm the redness of rosacea and soften scars. However, laser is not a single treatment. It is a whole family of very different devices, each tuned to target something in the skin. Choosing the wrong one, or the wrong settings, can do real harm, especially in darker skin tones. This guide explains the main types of laser used for skin, what each one treats and what to expect. We pay particular attention to the special cases that need real caution, namely skin of colour, melasma and rosacea.

Please note, we are an online skin clinic so do not offer laser treatments. We have written this guide because we believe people deserve clear, honest information about all of their options.

How Do Lasers Work on Skin?

A laser produces a single, wavelength of light. The skin contains several that absorb light, and each target absorbs some wavelengths more than others. The three main targets are:

The art of laser treatment is matching the wavelength to the target you want to hit whilst sparing everything around it. This is why there are so many different types of lasers for skin treatment. A device tuned to haemoglobin treats redness and visible vessels. One tuned to melanin treats hyperpigmentation whereas one tuned to water vaporises or heats the skin to it. Get the match right and the result can be excellent. If it is the wrong type, or you use too much energy, the laser heats the wrong target. This is exactly how burns, scarring and pigment problems happen. The matching of wavelength to target also explains why skin colour matters so much in terms of effectiveness and safety. We will we come back to this later.

What are the Main Types of Laser for Skin?

Lasers for skin fall into a few broad groups based on what they target. It helps to know the named devices in each group, as clinics often market by brand rather than by laser type. The main of laser available for skin are:

A related device worth mentioning is which is very popular for skin treatment. However, IPL is not technically a laser, it emits a broad spectrum of light rather than a single wavelength. Broadband light (BBL) is also another more advanced version of the same idea. Clinics use these for redness, sun damage and hyperpigmentation. We cover them in detail in our post on .

What Do Lasers Treat?

Because different lasers hit different targets, the family as a whole covers a wide range of concerns. The main uses, and the lasers typically used for each, are:

Are Lasers Safe for Skin of Colour?

Lasers can be used safely in darker skin, but the risks are far higher, and the wrong device can cause lasting damage. The reason is that darker skin has more melanin in the epidermis, and many lasers are absorbed by melanin. So in darker skin the laser energy is absorbed by the whole surface rather than just the target. This can cause burns, and even permanent loss of pigment.

A few principles make laser treatment safer in skin of colour. The . This is because melanin absorbs this longer wavelength the least, so the beam passes the surface pigment and reaches its target more safely. Picosecond lasers are also emerging as a safer option, because their very short pulses cause less heat damage. By contrast, , because its broad spectrum is absorbed non-selectively by melanin and the risk of burns and pigment is high.

Another important factor is the person holding the device. Treating darker skin safely takes specific training and experience, conservative settings and careful preparation. If you have skin of colour and are considering laser, choose a practitioner who is experienced in and commonly treats skin like yours. Our posts on and covers this and other tips in more detail.

Can Lasers Treat Melasma?

deserves its own warning, because it is the condition where lasers most often make things worse. This is because is a chronic, relapsing form of hyperpigmentation driven by hormones, heat and UV light. Lasers can fade the pigment, but they also generate heat. Unfortunately heat is one of the things that drives melasma in the first place.

This is why lasers are a or third-line treatment for melasma, never the first move. . Where practitioners do use laser, current practice favours a cautious, low-energy approach. The , is the most studied option. However, it works best combined with other treatments rather than alone. For most people, melasma is better managed first with prescription topical treatment and strict sun protection. like , and can help fade pigment. Strict sun protection with sunscreen containing broad filters like can help block the visible light that worsens . For more detail on managing this condition checkout our posts on and .

Are Lasers Good for Rosacea?

Here the news is more positive. is one area where lasers are genuinely a first-rate treatment, specifically for the redness and visible vessels. Vascular lasers target the haemoglobin in blood vessels, which lets them reduce the flushing, the persistent redness and the that topical treatments cannot touch. The are the main devices used.

It is worth being clear about what laser can and cannot do for . Laser skin treatment works well for the vascular component (the redness and vessels). It does little for the spots and bumps of rosacea, which still need medical treatment. This is why laser is best thought of as one part of a rosacea plan rather than a standalone cure. Most people still need topical or oral treatment to control the inflammatory side, with ingredients like and . Our guide to the covers how these fit together and our post on helps tell them apart.

Can Lasers Treat Acne?

For active acne, the evidence is lasers can help but the effect is more modest than for medical treatment. Light and (where a light-sensitising agent is applied first) can help target the and calm inflammation. More recently, a new class of laser has taken a different approach by targeting the oil glands directly. The for inflammatory acne. They work by selectively heating and shrinking the sebaceous glands. In a , around 87% achieved at least a 50% reduction in inflammatory lesions by 26 weeks. The results also held across all skin types making this a potentially promising option for people who cannot tolerate or do not want long-term medication.

That said, laser does not replace conventional acne treatment. The established medical treatments target the causes of acne directly, and they are cheaper, better evidenced and what guidelines reach for first. , , antibiotics and hormonal like remain first-line. Laser is best seen as an option for resistant cases who do not wish to start or for people who cannot use the usual treatments.

Where lasers genuinely shine is in their secondary use. They are one of the best treatments for , with fractional lasers improving the texture of pitted scars and vascular lasers fading the redness of . For most people, the sensible order is to clear the acne first with treatment, then address any scarring or marks once breakouts are under control.

Is Laser Treatment Safe?

Done by an experienced practitioner on the right candidate, lasers are generally safe. The risks come from the wrong device, the wrong settings or the wrong . Common side effects of laser treatment are:

Laser is not suitable for everyone, and some situations are clear contraindications or call for real caution. You should avoid laser, or proceed only with specialist advice, if you:

Preparation makes a real difference to both safety and results. In the weeks before treatment, the usual advice is to use a daily , avoid sun exposure and self-tan, and stop any irritating actives like retinoids or exfoliants for a few days as directed. In darker skin, a prescriber may also start a pigment-suppressing treatment like beforehand to lower the risk of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. After treatment, strict sun protection and gentle skincare are essential whilst the skin recovers.

What Results Can You Expect from Laser Treatment?

Laser results depend on the device, the concern and the skill of the operator, but some general hold. Several sessions are usually needed, not one. Non-ablative and vascular treatments in particular work gradually over a course spaced weeks apart. Ablative resurfacing gives more dramatic results in fewer sessions, but with significant downtime and weeks of redness as the skin heals.

Results are also rarely permanent, because the skin keeps ageing and the original triggers remain. Sun damage and hyperpigmentation can return with further UV exposure. Rosacea vessels tend to recur over a few years and need maintenance. Melasma almost always returns ongoing topical treatment and sun protection. As with any skin treatment, daily is essential to protect the result, and it matters even more after laser because the skin is more vulnerable to UV.

What are the Alternatives to Laser Skin Treatment?

Laser is rarely the only way to treat a given concern, and it is often not the first choice. Depending on what you are treating, the main alternatives are:

The right choice depends on your concern, your skin type and your tolerance for downtime. For pigment conditions in particular, a topical-first approach is often the wisest place to start. Our posts on and the explain why the right treatment depends on getting the diagnosis right first.

What About Laser Hair Removal?

Laser hair removal is a different topic and outside the scope of this guide, which is about treating skin conditions. It uses lasers to target the pigment in the hair follicle rather than the skin. The same skin-colour principles apply, as the longer-wavelength Nd:YAG is the safer choice for darker skin. We cover hair removal and related treatments in our blog.

How to Get Laser Treatment in the UK

Laser treatment is not available on the NHS for cosmetic skin concerns. It is available through dermatology and laser clinics which usually charge a set fee per session depending on the size of the treatment area and type of device. It is usually cheaper to buy a course. If you are considering it, the quality and experience of the practitioner matter more than anything else, particularly for darker skin or for melasma. Look for a provider who assesses your skin type properly, explains the risks honestly and can show you results in skin like yours. Be wary of anyone offering one device as the answer to every concern.

It is also worth knowing that laser is often not the right first step. Many of the concerns people seek laser for, including melasma, hyperpigmentation, rosacea and early signs of ageing, respond well to topical treatment. This is a safer, cheaper place to start.

At City Skin Clinic, we do provide bespoke topical skin treatments using ingredients like , , and where appropriate. Our doctors will design a treatment plan entirely around your skin. You can read more About Laser Hair Removal (use www.researchgate.net here) our custom treatments for , , and , or to start. The journey towards great skin .

This article is for general information and does not constitute medical advice. Laser should only be carried out by a suitably qualified and experienced practitioner after an individual assessment. Always seek advice from a qualified medical professional about your own skin.

by:

The journey to great skin starts here. Start your online consultation for personalised prescription-strength skincare.

 

Supported payment methods

Follow us

Copyright © 2026 City Skin Clinic – City Skin Clinic and The Modern Salon brought to you by Brainworks Interactive Ltd. registered in England No. .

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top