Barrier first
Makeup timing
Hygiene guidance
Women’s Health Clinic FAQ
How long after a CO2 laser session can I safely wear makeup?
Makeup timing after CO2 laser is less about a fixed date and more about whether the skin surface has closed. Applying cosmetics too early can irritate fragile skin and increase infection risk.
Direct answer
You can usually wear makeup only once the treated skin is fully closed, comfortable to cleanse and free from raw areas, weeping, crusting or active peeling. For many fractional CO2 treatments this may be around 7 to 10 days; lighter settings may be sooner if intact, while deeper or fully ablative resurfacing may need 10 to 14 days or longer. Your clinician should confirm the timing before you restart cosmetics.
If the skin stings, burns, feels hot, becomes more red or still has micro-crusting, wait. Mineral, non-comedogenic and fragrance-free products with clean applicators are usually preferred when makeup is reintroduced.
Educational only. Follow your personalised written aftercare instructions first. Results vary. Not a cure.

Makeup after CO2 laser
At a glance
The safest rule is simple: makeup waits until the protective surface layer has returned and the skin is no longer raw or peeling.
At a glance
Timing follows healing, not the calendar alone
Do not apply
No makeup on raw, weeping or crusted skin.
Typical range
Often 7-10 days for many fractional treatments.
Deeper settings
Fully ablative treatment can need longer.
First products
Use clean, gentle, mineral or non-comedogenic makeup.
Most important safety point
If makeup stings, burns or worsens redness, remove it gently, stop using it and contact the clinic.
No active peeling
Clean tools
Mineral makeup
Gentle removal
Detailed answer
Makeup is safe only after the barrier has recovered
CO2 laser creates controlled injury in the skin. Until re-epithelialisation has occurred, cosmetics can act as irritants or contaminants on a surface that is still trying to close.
The milestone is intact skin
Re-epithelialised means the skin has formed a new protective surface. It should not be raw, open, oozing, crusting or actively peeling before makeup is considered.
No weeping
No peeling
Clinician cleared
Why early makeup is risky
Cosmetics can trap debris, irritate the barrier, block follicles or introduce bacteria when the surface is still open or fragile.
Why timing varies
Lighter fractional settings may close faster. Deeper fractional or fully ablative treatment usually means longer redness, crusting and downtime.
What to use first
When cleared, start with a simple mineral, fragrance-free or non-comedogenic product. Avoid heavy, old, fragranced or long-wear formulas at first.
How to apply it
Use clean hands, disposable sponges or freshly washed brushes. Dab rather than rub, and remove gently without scrubbing.
Pinkness does not always mean unsafe
Some pinkness may persist after the skin has closed. Makeup may be possible once the surface is intact, but lingering heat, stinging, open areas or active peeling are reasons to wait.
If you need camouflage for work or confidence, ask about appropriate products at review rather than experimenting on freshly treated skin.
Patient safety
Why waiting matters
A few extra days without makeup can reduce avoidable irritation during the most vulnerable part of recovery.
Infection risk
Open or weeping skin is easier to contaminate, especially with old sponges, brushes, jars or heavy products.
Irritant reactions
Fragrance, preservatives, pigment and active ingredients can sting or inflame newly resurfaced skin.
Pigment risk
Inflammation and rubbing can worsen post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, particularly in pigment-prone skin.
Better removal
Makeup has to come off. If removing it requires friction, the skin is probably not ready.
The WHC lens: function before coverage
It is understandable to want to cover redness, especially before work or social contact. The safer decision is to protect healing first, then use makeup once the barrier can tolerate application and removal.
Menopause-related dryness, rosacea, acne tendency, eczema, darker skin tones and previous PIH can all make product reintroduction more sensitive and should be discussed in follow-up.
Considerations
How to restart makeup safely
When your clinician confirms the surface is ready, restart gradually and keep the routine simple.
Start with the gentlest option
Choose a clean, light, mineral or non-comedogenic product. Avoid old applicators, shared products, fake tan, exfoliating makeup, strong fragrance and heavy long-wear formulas.
Mineral base
No fake tan
Gentle removal
Before applying
Check there are no raw areas, weeping, crusts or active peeling. Cleanse comfortably and apply only after your routine skincare has settled.
During application
Use light pressure. Dab rather than drag. Stop if the product stings, burns or makes the skin feel hot.
Removal
Remove with a gentle cleanser and lukewarm water. Do not use wipes, scrubs, cleansing brushes or exfoliating cloths while the barrier is fragile.
Work planning
If your role is public-facing, plan downtime around the likely no-makeup window rather than assuming you can cover redness early.
What about sunscreen?
Sun protection remains more important than cosmetic coverage. Sunscreen timing depends on whether the surface is closed and what your clinician recommends.
Once sunscreen and makeup are allowed, keep layers light and remove them gently. Hats and shade remain important while redness persists.
Common concerns and myths
Makeup after CO2 laser myths
The safest timing is guided by skin closure, not by impatience, product marketing or a fixed social date.
Day five is always safe
Some lighter protocols may heal quickly, but deeper resurfacing often needs longer. Any raw, crusted or peeling area means wait.
Mineral makeup is harmless
Mineral makeup may be gentler once healed, but it should still not be used on open, oozing or actively peeling skin.
Coverage speeds recovery
Makeup covers redness; it does not heal the barrier. Moist wound care, sun protection and time are the priorities.
Fake tan is different from makeup
Fake tan can irritate and create uneven colour on recovering skin. It is usually avoided for longer than simple mineral coverage.
Medical camouflage needs guidance
Camouflage products can help confidence, but after resurfacing they should be introduced only when the skin is ready and with clean technique.
Safety checklist
Before you put makeup back on
Use this checklist before the first application after CO2 laser treatment.
Is the surface closed?
No raw patches, oozing, crusting, bleeding or active peeling should remain before makeup is considered.
Can I cleanse comfortably?
If gentle cleansing still stings strongly or triggers heat, the barrier may not be ready for cosmetics.
Are my tools clean?
Use clean brushes, disposable sponges or clean fingertips. Avoid old sponges and shared products.
Do I have clearance?
Follow your review advice, especially after deeper treatment, pigment risk, infection concerns or delayed healing.
Reassuring signs
The skin is closed, pink rather than raw, comfortable to cleanse and your clinician has said makeup can restart.
No crusting
Comfortable cleanse
Reasons to wait
Delay makeup if there is stinging, heat, weeping, crusting, active peeling, pustules, increasing redness or worsening swelling.
Weeping
Pustules
When to escalate
When makeup reaction needs advice
Seek medical advice promptly if symptoms worsen after restarting products. Use NHS 111 for urgent advice or call 999 in a life-threatening emergency.
Use NHS 111
Possible infection
Spreading redness, warmth, swelling, pus, yellow crusting, fever, worsening tenderness or feeling generally unwell.
Irritant reaction
Burning, itching, rash, swelling or new redness after applying a cosmetic product.
Cold sores or blisters
Painful blisters, tingling, grouped spots or cold sore symptoms after treatment around the mouth.
Pigment change
New dark patches, uneven colour, whitening or inflammation that does not settle after stopping the product.
Educational only. This page cannot assess your skin. Contact your treating clinic for personalised advice, use NHS 111 for urgent advice, or call 999 in a life-threatening emergency.
Makeup timing questions
Can I wear makeup for an event one week after treatment?
Possibly after lighter fractional treatment, but only if the skin is fully closed and your clinician agrees. If you are planning an important event, schedule treatment with enough margin for redness, peeling and no-makeup downtime.What kind of makeup is best first?
Choose a simple mineral, fragrance-free or non-comedogenic product. Avoid heavy long-wear products, exfoliating makeup, fragranced formulas and anything that needs firm rubbing to remove.Can I use concealer on one red patch?
Not if the area is raw, crusted, weeping or actively peeling. Patchy redness can be normal after resurfacing, but worsening redness, heat or tenderness should be reviewed.When can I use fake tan?
Fake tan is usually avoided for longer than makeup because recovering skin can absorb colour unevenly and become irritated. Ask your clinician before using tanning products.Regulatory resources
Authoritative resources
These resources support safe recovery, skin-barrier protection and careful reintroduction of cosmetic coverage.
NHS laser resurfacing leaflet
Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust gives patient guidance on dressings, skin protection and when to seek advice after resurfacing.
British Cosmetic Dermatology Group
This resource explains expected healing after ablative resurfacing and supports waiting until the surface is healed before normal routines resume.
Changing Faces skin camouflage
Changing Faces describes specialist skin camouflage support, relevant when people need advice about covering visible redness safely.
Next step
Unsure when makeup is safe?
WHC can help you plan recovery, work commitments and product reintroduction around your CO2 laser treatment and skin-barrier healing.
Educational only. A consultation and follow-up advice are needed to confirm your personal makeup timing. Results vary. Not a cure.