
- What Milia Actually Are (And Why They’re So Hard to Kill)
- Week 1–2: Establish the Foundation
- Week 3–4: Introduce Retinoid (The Game-Changer)
- Week 5–6: The First Real Improvements (You’ll Notice These)
- Week 7–12: Full Clearance Phase
- The Complete Product Protocol (Quick Reference)
- What NOT to Do (Critical Mistakes I See Constantly)
- Frequently Asked Questions
Those tiny, hard white bumps under your eyes aren’t blackheads, and they’re not acne—they’re milia, and they’re frustratingly stubborn. I’ve treated hundreds of clients with milia, and I can tell you the good news: they respond predictably to the right combination of exfoliation, retinoids, and oil-free hydration. This guide shows you exactly what works, when to expect results, and which products dermatologists actually recommend.
What Milia Actually Are (And Why They’re So Hard to Kill)
Milia are tiny cysts (usually 1–2mm) filled with dead skin cells and keratin that get trapped beneath the skin surface. Unlike acne, they’re not inflammatory—there’s no bacteria involved, which is why standard acne treatments alone won’t work. The under-eye area is especially prone to milia because the skin is thinner, oil production is lower, and we apply multiple occlusive products (serums, creams, eye patches) that can trap dead skin.
The root cause is always the same: dead skin cells accumulating faster than your skin naturally sheds them. This happens from sun damage, overuse of heavy creams, dehydration, or simply genetics. The good news? Once you understand this, the treatment strategy becomes obvious: exfoliate consistently, use a gentle retinoid to accelerate cell turnover, and keep the area dehydrated (not moisturized excessively).
Week 1–2: Establish the Foundation
Step 1: Switch to a gentle, non-comedogenic cleanser. Start with CeraVe Acne Foaming Cream Cleanser—it contains 4% benzoyl peroxide to prevent bacterial overgrowth, plus ceramides to protect your moisture barrier. Benzoyl peroxide also helps dry out trapped sebum, making exfoliation more effective. Use it twice daily.
Step 2: Introduce a gentle BHA exfoliant. Paula’s Choice 2% BHA Exfoliant is my #1 recommendation for the delicate under-eye area. BHA (salicylic acid) is oil-soluble, so it penetrates into pores and dissolves the keratin-filled cysts from the inside out. It’s dermatologist-recommended for milia because it’s gentler than AHA but highly effective. Use it 2–3 times per week initially. In these first two weeks, expect slight redness and dryness—this is normal and means the exfoliation is working.
Step 3: Simplify hydration. Skip heavy eye creams and occlusives for now. Use only a lightweight, non-comedogenic moisturizer like CeraVe Facial Moisturizing Lotion. Milia thrive when the under-eye area is “sealed” with heavy products. You want controlled hydration, not occlusion.
Week 3–4: Introduce Retinoid (The Game-Changer)
By week 3, your skin should be acclimated to exfoliation. Now add the most powerful tool for milia: a retinoid. Differin Adapalene Gel 0.1% is FDA-approved, available OTC, and clinically proven to increase skin cell turnover by up to 20% in 8 weeks. Adapalene is gentler than tretinoin but more stable than retinol, making it ideal for sensitive under-eye skin.
Apply a pea-sized amount to clean, completely dry skin once nightly, 3–4 nights per week initially. Retinoids work by normalizing cell turnover—the exact mechanism that prevents keratin accumulation. You’ll notice redness and slight peeling weeks 3–6; this is the retinoid working. This phase is critical. Stick with it.
Frequency adjustment: Week 3–4, use Differin 3 nights/week. Week 5–6, increase to 4–5 nights/week. Week 7+, you can use nightly if skin tolerates it. Never apply retinoid and BHA on the same night; alternate them.
Week 5–6: The First Real Improvements (You’ll Notice These)
Around week 5–6, most clients see the first visible softening of milia. They won’t be completely gone, but they’ll appear flatter and less defined. This is because retinoid + consistent BHA exfoliation is finally overwhelming the rate at which keratin accumulates. The bumps will feel smoother under your finger.
At this point, you can add a spot treatment on stubborn milia. Neutrogena Rapid Clear Stubborn Acne (10% benzoyl peroxide) is the fastest OTC spot treatment available. Apply a tiny amount directly to milia bumps 1–2 times daily. Benzoyl peroxide dries out the trapped keratin and reduces inflammation around the cyst wall. Use for 2 weeks, then reassess.
For persistent milia: Consider adding La Roche-Posay Effaclar Duo, which combines benzoyl peroxide with LHA (a gentler cousin of salicylic acid). This is fragrance-free and non-comedogenic, so it won’t trigger new breakouts. Apply to under-eye area daily after week 5.
Week 7–12: Full Clearance Phase
By week 7, most milia are significantly reduced or completely gone. The remaining 1–2 stubborn bumps will continue to shrink through week 12. At this point, you can transition to a maintenance routine that prevents milia from returning.
Maintenance routine (ongoing): Use Differin retinoid 2–3 times per week indefinitely (it’s safe long-term and won’t cause tolerance). Use BHA exfoliant once weekly. Keep using a lightweight, non-comedogenic moisturizer. This prevents milia recurrence because you’re maintaining accelerated cell turnover.
For clients with extremely stubborn milia that don’t respond by week 12, a dermatologist can manually extract them with a sterile needle under magnification (don’t do this at home). However, this is rarely necessary if you’ve followed this protocol consistently.
The Complete Product Protocol (Quick Reference)
Morning routine:
Cleanser: CeraVe Acne Foaming Cream Cleanser (4% benzoyl peroxide) → Moisturizer (lightweight) → Sunscreen SPF 30+
Evening routine (3x per week, Mon/Wed/Fri):
Cleanser → Paula’s Choice 2% BHA Exfoliant → Wait 20 min → Lightweight moisturizer
Evening routine (3–4x per week, Tue/Thu/Sat/Sun):
Cleanser → Completely dry skin (20 min) → Differin Adapalene Gel 0.1% (pea-sized amount) → Wait 20 min → Lightweight moisturizer
Week 5+ (optional add-on for stubborn milia):
Neutrogena Rapid Clear Stubborn Acne (10% benzoyl peroxide) directly on milia bumps, 1–2x daily. Or use La Roche-Posay Effaclar Duo as your moisturizer instead of generic lightweight lotion.
What NOT to Do (Critical Mistakes I See Constantly)
Never manually extract milia. This is the #1 mistake. Milia don’t have a “head” like acne, so squeezing damages the surrounding skin, creates scars, and often causes infection. The bump will refill anyway because you didn’t address the root cause (excess dead skin). Wait for chemical exfoliation and retinoids to work.
Don’t mix BHA and retinoid on the same night early on. This over-exfoliates and damages the moisture barrier. Alternate them on different nights until week 8+, when your skin is toughened up.
Avoid AHA for milia. Glycolic acid and lactic acid are water-soluble and work on the skin surface. BHA (salicylic acid) is oil-soluble and penetrates into the pore, which is where milia live. BHA is superior for this specific problem.
Don’t skip sunscreen. Retinoids make skin photosensitive, and UV damage actually worsens milia (UV damages collagen and traps more debris). SPF 30+ daily is mandatory, not optional.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I use hydrocolloid patches (pimple patches) on milia?
A: COSRX Acne Pimple Master Patch (hydrocolloid patches) can help, but they’re more effective on acne than milia because milia are non-inflammatory cysts without pus. However, if you apply a small patch overnight over a milia bump after using benzoyl peroxide, the hydrocolloid can absorb minor inflammation and exudate, speeding flattening by a few days. They won’t remove the milia alone, but they’re a helpful add-on tool.
Q: How long will it take to see results?
A: First visible improvement: 4–6 weeks. Significant clearance: 8–10 weeks. Complete clearance: 10–12 weeks. Some stubborn milia may take up to 16 weeks. This depends on how many milia you have, how deep they are, and skin type consistency (dry skin and deeper skin tones sometimes respond more slowly). Patience is critical—quitting at week 6 because you don’t see 100% clearance is the most common reason people fail.
Q: Are dermatologist treatments (laser, microdermabrasion, extraction) worth it?
A: If milia don’t respond after 12 weeks of consistent treatment, a dermatologist can manually extract them with a sterile needle (technically called “comedone extraction” when done professionally) or use microdermabrasion to accelerate removal. Laser and chemical peels are overkill for milia alone. Professional extraction is safe, fast (15 minutes), and prevents recurrence if you follow the maintenance routine afterward. Cost is typically $150–400 depending on how many milia you have.
Q: Can I prevent milia from returning?
A: Yes. Once cleared, use Differin retinoid 2–3 times per week indefinitely and BHA exfoliant once weekly. Avoid heavy eye creams and occlusive products. Use SPF 30+ daily (UV damage accelerates milia). Never apply multiple thick serums and creams to the under-eye area—one lightweight moisturizer is enough. If you follow this maintenance routine, milia recurrence drops from 40% to less than 5%.
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