How to Know Your Skin Type (Simple At-Home Test)

How to Know Your Skin Type (Simple At-Home Test)

How to Know Your Skin Type (Simple At-Home Test)

Not sure if your skin is oily, dry, combination, or sensitive?

Before buying expensive skincare, you need to know your skin type.

If you’ve searched “how to know your skin type,” this guide will walk you through a simple test you can do at home — no tools required.


Why Knowing Your Skin Type Matters

Using the wrong products can cause:

  • Breakouts

  • Irritation

  • Excess oil

  • Dry patches

  • Damaged skin barrier

Your skin type determines what ingredients and textures work best for you.


The 3-Step Skin Type Test (At Home)

Step 1: Wash Your Face

Use a gentle cleanser.
Do not apply toner, serum, or moisturizer afterward.

Pat dry and wait 30–60 minutes.


Step 2: Observe Your Skin

After 1 hour, look closely in the mirror.

Ask yourself:

  • Does your whole face feel tight?

  • Is your T-zone shiny?

  • Are some areas oily and others dry?

  • Do you see flaking?


Step 3: Blotting Paper Test (Optional)

Press blotting paper on:

  • Forehead

  • Nose

  • Cheeks

  • Chin

Check how much oil transfers.


The 5 Main Skin Types

1️⃣ Oily Skin

  • Shiny all over

  • Enlarged pores

  • Frequent breakouts

  • Oil shows on blotting paper

Best for: lightweight gel moisturizers, oil-free formulas


2️⃣ Dry Skin

  • Tight feeling

  • Flaky patches

  • Dull appearance

  • Little to no oil on blotting paper

Best for: cream moisturizers, ceramides, squalane


3️⃣ Combination Skin

  • Oily T-zone

  • Dry or normal cheeks

  • Uneven texture

Best for: balanced hydration, lightweight layers


4️⃣ Normal Skin

  • Not too oily

  • Not too dry

  • Rare breakouts

  • Small pores

Best for: simple maintenance routine


5️⃣ Sensitive Skin

  • Easily irritated

  • Redness

  • Burning or stinging with products

  • Reacts to fragrance

Best for: fragrance-free, barrier-supporting products


Can Your Skin Type Change?

Yes.

Your skin type can change due to:

  • Hormones

  • Climate

  • Age

  • Over-exfoliation

  • Stress

Many people think they have oily skin when they actually have dehydrated skin.


Common Mistake: Confusing Oily and Dehydrated Skin

If your skin feels oily but tight,
you may have dehydrated skin — not oily skin.

Treating dehydration correctly can reduce breakouts.


Final Thoughts

Understanding your skin type is the first step toward healthier skin.

Don’t guess. Test.

✨ Explore our skin-type-friendly routines designed for acne-prone and sensitive skin.

[Find Your Routine]

Back to blog