Skincare

Reddit and TikTok Beauty Hacks Causing Burns and Breakouts

Danielle Louise, Beauty Expert at Fresha, explains the “weird hacks” that can quietly damage your skin barrier — and what to do instead

From cocoa powder “dry shampoo” to diaper cream on pimples and even at-home acid spot treatments, viral beauty hacks shared on Reddit and social media may look harmless — but Fresha beauty expert Danielle Louise is warning that many of the most popular DIY tricks can trigger breakouts, contact dermatitis, barrier damage, pigmentation and in some cases chemical burns.

A recent Reddit thread on “weird beauty hacks that actually work” included everything from applying ice directly to the face, to using toothpaste, nappy rash cream, shampoo, or even strong acids as at-home treatments. While some tips can feel effective in the moment, Danielle says the short-term “results” often come from drying, swelling, cooling or coating the skin, rather than truly improving it.

Danielle Louise, Beauty Expert at Fresha, said: “These hacks ‘work’ because they create an immediate effect — less puffiness, tighter-feeling skin, a drier-looking pimple — but they can also create the perfect conditions for irritation and breakouts later. Skin is a barrier, not a science experiment. The biggest risk is that people damage their barrier and then spend weeks trying to calm redness, flakes, bumps and sensitivity that didn’t exist before.”

The biggest risks hidden in “weird beauty hacks”

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DIY acids and peroxide: the fastest route to burns

Some commenters referenced keeping strong acids (like TCA) or using hydrogen peroxide on bumps and dark spots.

“This is where ‘DIY beauty’ becomes genuinely risky,” Danielle added. “Misusing strong acids can cause burns, scarring and long-term pigmentation that’s far harder — and more expensive — to fix than the original concern.”

What it can cause: chemical burns, scarring, hyperpigmentation, infections.

Toothpaste, shampoo and random ointments on pimples

Hacks like toothpaste on spotsanti-dandruff shampoo on the face, or antibiotic ointments can irritate, over-dry or trigger dermatitis.

What it can cause: barrier damage, rebound oiliness, worsening inflammation, contact dermatitis.

Kitchen skincare: lemon, cinnamon, vinegar, powders

Pantry ingredients such as lemoncinnamonapple cider vinegarcornstarch, and cocoa can disrupt pH, cause sensitivity, and lead to build-up (especially on the scalp).

What it can cause: irritation, follicle blockage, itchy scalp, flaking, uneven tone.

Slugging with petroleum jelly: helpful for some, a flare trigger for others

Vaseline/Aquaphor “slugging” can support very dry skin — but can backfire if layered over strong actives or used on skin prone to perioral dermatitis or congestion.

What it can cause: clogged pores for some skin types, irritation when actives are trapped, dermatitis flare-ups.

Ice directly on skin

Ice can reduce puffiness temporarily, but direct contact can stress fragile capillaries and worsen sensitivity.

What it can cause: broken capillaries, redness, sensitivity — particularly in reactive skin.

Danielle Louise’s Red Flag checklist: when to skip the hack

Danielle says to avoid any trick that:

  • stings, burns or tingles sharply
  • uses strong acids or “professional” peel products at home
  • involves toothpaste, lemon, vinegar, cinnamon or undiluted essential oils
  • uses products not designed for facial skin (shampoo, antibiotic ointment, eye drops)
  • is applied near eyes or lash line without being eye-safe

“If you wouldn’t put it on a baby’s skin or near your eyes, don’t put it on a compromised skin barrier,” Danielle said. “And if you’re already using retinoids or exfoliating acids, be extra cautious — combining trends is how people accidentally overdo it.”

Safer swaps that deliver the same ‘hack’ result — without the fallout

Viral goalCommon hackWhy it backfiresFresha-approved alternative
De-puffingIce cubes on faceCan trigger redness, broken capillariesCool compress (cold flannel) or chilled eye mask
Greasy rootsCocoa/cornstarch DIY powdersBuild-up, itchy scalp, blocked folliclesScalp-safe dry shampoo + proper wash schedule
“Drying” a pimpleToothpaste / harsh antisepticsIrritation, peeling, reboundSalicylic acid or benzoyl peroxide spot treatment
“Glass skin” overnightHeavy slugging over activesCan trap actives and irritateBarrier moisturiser or slug only on dry areas, thin layer
BrighteningLemon / vinegar mixespH damage, photosensitivityVitamin C formulated for face + daily SPF

When to get help (and stop DIY-ing)

Danielle advises booking an appointment if you have:

  • persistent redness, burning or tightness
  • recurring bumps around the mouth (possible perioral dermatitis)
  • stubborn acne that isn’t responding to gentle routines
  • pigmentation that worsens after “brightening” hacks

“The most effective beauty routine is the one your skin can tolerate consistently,” Danielle said. “If a hack feels dramatic, the damage can be dramatic too — and skin repairs slowly.”


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