Ingredient Layering
Can I Use Ceramides and Tretinoin Together?
Great Together
Ceramides and Tretinoin work great together!
What You Should Know
- โขThese ingredients complement each other and can be used in the same routine.
- โขApply Tretinoin first (actives), then Ceramides.
- โขBoth can be used in the same routine step without conflicts.
Recommended Layering Order
Step 1
Tretinoin
retinoid
Step 2
Ceramides
occlusive
General rule: apply thinnest/most active ingredients first, thicker/occlusive ingredients last.
occlusive
Ceramides are lipids that make up roughly 50% of the skin barrier. They're not glamorous, rarely trend on social media, and don't promise overnight transformation โ which is exactly why they work. Consistent use demonstrably improves barrier function, moisture retention, and skin resilience.
retinoid
Tretinoin is the gold standard of anti-aging and acne treatment โ and it's not even close. Unlike retinol, which needs to convert twice before it becomes active, tretinoin IS the active form of vitamin A. It's prescription-only for good reason: it works faster and more powerfully than anything over the counter, but it also causes more irritation. The K-beauty approach to tretinoin is all about buffering, hydrating, and supporting the skin barrier while the tret does its job.
More Layering Combos
What pairs with Ceramides?
What pairs with Tretinoin?
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use Ceramides and Tretinoin together?
Ceramides and Tretinoin work great together! They can be layered in the same K-beauty routine.
Should I apply Ceramides before or after Tretinoin?
Apply thinnest/most active first. Based on their categories, apply Tretinoin first, then follow with the other.
Are there products with both Ceramides and Tretinoin?
We don't currently track any products that combine Ceramides and Tretinoin as key ingredients. Layering two separate products is the typical approach.
Is Ceramides stronger than Tretinoin?
Ceramides has 5/5 clinical evidence; Tretinoin has 5/5. They have similar clinical backing.