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How to Layer Serums: The Correct Order (and Why It Matters)

3 min read

How to Layer Serums: The Correct Order (and Why It Matters)

Apply serums in order of thinnest to thickest texture, with hydrating water-based serums first and oil-based or treatment serums last. The general rule: water before oil, hydrator before active, and finish with moisturiser to seal everything in.

Most skincare routines do not fail because of the products themselves. They fail because the order is wrong, which means actives cannot absorb properly and the routine ends up doing far less than it could. Here is the correct layering order, and what to do when you have multiple serums in one routine.

The core rule: thin to thick

Lighter, water-based formulas should always go first. They absorb quickly into damp skin. Heavier, oil-based formulas should go last, because they sit on top and can block lighter products from absorbing.

If you reverse the order, water-based serums sit on top of the oil and never fully absorb. You end up with a sticky surface and reduced ingredient delivery.

The complete order of application

  1. Cleanser
  2. Toner or essence (water-based, applied to damp skin)
  3. Hyaluronic acid serum (water-based hydrator)
  4. Niacinamide serum (water-based treatment)
  5. Retinol, vitamin C, or other active treatment serum
  6. Peptide or barrier serum (slightly heavier)
  7. Eye cream
  8. Moisturiser
  9. Face oil (if using)
  10. SPF in the morning, overnight mask in the evening

You will not use every product every day. Pick what your skin needs and follow the order for what you do use.

How long to wait between serums

One to two minutes is usually enough. The aim is to let each layer absorb so the next one does not interfere. Two signs a layer has absorbed:

  • Your skin is no longer wet to the touch
  • The product is not visibly sitting on the surface

If you are time-pressed, prioritise the wait between actives (retinol, vitamin C) and your moisturiser. That window matters most.

Three common serum combinations and how to layer them

Hyaluronic acid and niacinamide

Hyaluronic acid first onto damp skin, wait a minute, then niacinamide on top. Or use our Hyaluronic Acid 1% + Niacinamide Serum, which combines both in one step.

Niacinamide and retinol

Niacinamide first, wait a minute, then retinol. Niacinamide helps buffer retinol-related irritation.

Vitamin C and sunscreen

Vitamin C first in the morning, allow full absorption, then SPF. The two work together to defend skin from oxidative damage.

What never to layer in the same routine

  • AHAs, BHAs, and retinol together at night. Pick one or alternate evenings.
  • Multiple high-strength actives. Stick to one treatment serum per routine.
  • Vitamin C and retinol back-to-back. Use vitamin C in the morning and retinol at night.

Frequently asked questions

How many serums can I use at once?

Two is the practical sweet spot for most routines: one hydrating serum and one targeted treatment serum.

Should I apply serum to wet or dry skin?

Water-based serums like hyaluronic acid absorb best into damp skin. Oil-based or treatment serums go on dry skin.

Can I layer the same serum twice for a stronger effect?

No. Doubling up does not double the result. It just wastes product. Stick to the directions on the label.

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