Why Oily Skin Overproduces Oil
Counterintuitively, over-stripping worsens oiliness — harsh cleansers strip the barrier, and skin responds by making more sebum. The fix is not to attack the oil but to regulate it and keep the barrier intact. That means gentle actives and lightweight hydration, not aggressive drying.
Best For Oil Control: The Ordinary Niacinamide
The Ordinary Niacinamide 10% + Zinc is the go-to oil-control serum. Niacinamide regulates sebum and refines the look of pores, and the 1% zinc adds extra oil control that suits oily and acne-prone skin specifically. At around $6 it is the value benchmark. If it pills on you, the zinc-free Good Molecules version is the smoother alternative.
Best For Clogged Pores: Paula's Choice 2% BHA
Paula's Choice 2% BHA is the pick for blackheads and congestion. Salicylic acid is oil-soluble, so it penetrates into pores to dissolve the sebum that causes blackheads — exactly what oily skin needs. Start two to three nights a week and build up slowly to avoid over-exfoliating.
Best Lightweight Hydration: COSRX Snail Mucin
Oily skin still needs hydration — skipping it backfires. The COSRX Snail Mucin essence is light, non-greasy, and soothing, so it hydrates without adding heaviness or clogging. Keeping the barrier happy is part of controlling oil.
How To Combine Them
Do not use everything at once. A sensible oily-skin routine: niacinamide most mornings, BHA a few nights a week, snail mucin for hydration, and always SPF. Introduce one active at a time. For exact ordering, see our layering guide.
The Short Version
Oil control: The Ordinary Niacinamide. Clogged pores: Paula's Choice BHA. Pills easily? Good Molecules niacinamide. Hydration: COSRX Snail Mucin. Regulate, do not strip.
FAQ
What is the best serum for oily skin?
For oil control, The Ordinary Niacinamide 10% + Zinc is the value benchmark; niacinamide regulates sebum and the zinc adds extra control for oily, acne-prone skin. For clogged pores, a salicylic acid (BHA) serum like Paula's Choice 2% BHA is the better pick. Many people use both.
Does oily skin need hydration?
Yes. Skipping hydration can make oiliness worse, because a stripped barrier prompts the skin to overproduce sebum. Use a lightweight, non-greasy hydrator like COSRX snail mucin so you hydrate without adding heaviness or clogging pores.
Is niacinamide or salicylic acid better for oily skin?
They do different jobs. Niacinamide regulates oil production and refines pores across the whole face. Salicylic acid (BHA) goes into pores to clear the sebum that causes blackheads. For general oil control choose niacinamide; for congestion and blackheads choose BHA.
How often should oily skin use a BHA?
Start with two to three nights a week and increase slowly if your skin tolerates it. Salicylic acid works best at a low pH around 3 to 4. Over-exfoliating is the most common mistake and can damage the barrier, which ironically increases oiliness.