Why Skin Behaves Differently Year Round

Spicules in Skincare

Your skin changes with the seasons because weather shifts disrupt its natural protective barrier, which keeps out irritants and holds in moisture.[1][4] This barrier, made of lipids, ceramides, and natural oils, struggles to keep up when humidity, temperature, and other factors swing quickly.[1][2]

In winter, cold dry air outside and hot indoor heating pull moisture from your skin fast.[2][4] This leads to higher transepidermal water loss, where skin loses water quicker than it can replace it.[4] You might see dryness, flaking, redness, itchiness, or even cracks, especially on hands and lips.[2][4] Conditions like eczema and psoriasis often flare up more because the weakened barrier lets irritants in deeper.[5][6] Hot showers or harsh soaps make it worse by stripping protective oils.[2]

Spring brings fluctuating temperatures and rising humidity after winter’s chill.[1] Skin that got used to dry air now faces higher moisture levels, which can cause sudden sensitivity or breakouts as oil production adjusts.[1] Products that worked fine before might irritate now.

Summer ramps up heat, UV rays, and humidity.[1] Pores enlarge, oiliness increases, and pollution sticks more easily, leading to congestion or shine.[1] Sweat and sun stress the skin, dilating blood vessels and sparking inflammation.[1][3]

Fall drops humidity while heaters kick on indoors.[1] Skin feels tight and rough as it loses summer’s moisture, with flare-ups for those prone to dryness.[1] Temperature swings between cool outdoors and warm inside make blood vessels expand and contract, showing redness if the barrier is off.[3]

Hormones play a role too, especially in winter.[3] Shorter days mess with sleep and raise cortisol, a stress hormone that boosts inflammation and breakouts.[3][5] You drink and sweat less, so dehydration hits harder, making skin produce extra oil as defense.[3] Stress from holidays or routine changes adds to it.[3][5]

Humidity swings hit everyone.[1][8] Low levels dry out skin by 25 to 30 percent in days, while high ones clog oily types.[1] Cold tightens blood flow, slowing repairs, and heat speeds oil and swelling.[1]

Kids feel it more since their skin barrier is thinner.[7] Overall, these shifts create stress like any change, tweaking pH, immunity, and how skin fights bacteria.[1][5]

Sources
https://skinsureclinic.com/why-your-skin-acts-up-during-season-change/
https://www.sagemed.co/blog/winter-rash-a-seasonal-skin-concern
https://www.aboutfaceaesthetics.com/winter-hormonal-skin-changes-south-carolina
https://trilliumclinic.com/winter-skin-care-a-dermatologists-guide/
https://www.ynetnews.com/health_science/article/rysfzczmze
https://healthcare.utah.edu/healthfeed/2025/12/why-winter-perfect-season-skin-treatments
https://fairhopepeds.com/news/winter-skincare-tips-for-kids-managing-dry-skin-eczema-and-seasonal-changes/
https://gaurisatva.com/blogs/wellness/how-weather-changes-affect-the-body

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