Search

Try a topic or steal a quick pick.


Black woman on a balcony at twilight holding a glass of rosé, looking out over the city during a self-date.

Trending Now

Quick Links

What Does Niacinamide Do? Benefits, Myths, and How to Use It

Glow Lens

Niacinamide

Niacinamide — also known as nicotinamide — is a water-soluble form of vitamin B3, an essential nutrient the body produces naturally from niacin or the amino acid tryptophan. In skincare, it is applied topically and is readily absorbed by the skin. Its mechanism is multifunctional: it supports ceramide synthesis in the skin barrier, reduces transepidermal water loss, inhibits melanin transfer between skin cells, regulates sebum production, and exerts anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. That combination of mechanisms is what makes it genuinely effective across such a wide range of skin concerns — barrier health, hyperpigmentation, acne, redness, and aging — without the irritation potential of most other actives.
Niacinamide's moment has been building for years but it hit mainstream critical mass in the early 2020s, driven largely by accessible brands that put clinical concentrations in affordable formulas. TikTok accelerated it significantly — niacinamide has considerably more TikTok views relative to its search volume than almost any other skincare ingredient, meaning the social discovery outpaced the organic search behavior. It became the ingredient people recommended to everyone regardless of skin type because it genuinely works across the board. Its appearance in everything from budget serums to high-end moisturizers to SPF formulas means most people are already using it without necessarily knowing it by name.
The myth
You can't use niacinamide and vitamin C together — they cancel each other out and cause a niacin flush. This has circulated widely since at least the 2010s and is repeated confidently across beauty forums, YouTube skincare videos, and brand marketing copy. The claim is that combining the two creates a chemical reaction that converts both ingredients into niacin, making them ineffective and causing the redness and flushing associated with niacin supplementation.
The truth
The myth originates from a small number of laboratory studies conducted in the 1960s that found niacinamide could convert to niacin under highly specific conditions — concentrated solutions, extreme temperatures, and acidic environments far outside anything that occurs when skincare products are applied to skin at room temperature. Those conditions are chemically irrelevant to how topical products behave on the face.Peer-reviewed research confirms that niacinamide at standard cosmetic concentrations is a stable, well-tolerated ingredient with documented benefits for barrier function, sebum regulation, hyperpigmentation, and inflammation. Modern dermatologists routinely recommend using niacinamide and vitamin C together. Many clinical formulations combine both. The idea that they cancel each other out or produce a harmful reaction in normal use is not supported by current evidence.
Works well for
All skin types — niacinamide is genuinely one of the few active ingredients that earns that claim without caveats. It is particularly effective for: oily and acne-prone skin (regulates sebum, reduces breakouts, minimizes pore appearance), hyperpigmentation and uneven tone (blocks melanin transfer), sensitive or reactive skin (reduces redness and inflammation, supports barrier), skin using retinol or acids (buffers irritation and supports recovery), and mature skin (supports collagen, improves elasticity, reduces fine lines). Safe during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
Use caution if
No skin type is excluded, but a few situations call for caution. High concentrations above 10% can cause flushing or irritation in sensitive skin — not from a niacin reaction but from concentration sensitivity. People with preexisting B vitamin allergies should patch test first. Those using unstabilized, high-concentration vitamin C formulas at very low pH may want to apply niacinamide separately rather than immediately layered — not because of the "cancel out" myth, but because the combined potency can be a lot for reactive skin in the adjustment period.
Niacin (Nicotinic Acid)
Niacin is the parent compound — vitamin B3 in its raw form. Taken orally at high doses, niacin causes a well-documented "niacin flush": temporary redness, warmth, and tingling caused by blood vessel dilation. Niacinamide is the amide form of niacin and does not cause this flush in normal topical use. They are related but chemically distinct. The flushing people sometimes experience with niacinamide products is almost always due to high concentrations or formula sensitivity — not the ingredient behaving like niacin.
Nicotinamide
Nicotinamide is the same molecule as niacinamide — they are two names for the same compound. Some products and clinical studies use nicotinamide; others use niacinamide. If you see either on an ingredient label, it is the same thing. No practical difference.
Vitamin C (and the "don't mix" myth)
Niacinamide and vitamin C are frequently named as incompatible — the claim being that combining them causes a reaction that forms niacin, which causes flushing and cancels out both ingredients. This originates from 1960s lab studies using high concentrations at extreme temperatures that have no relevance to skincare formulations at room temperature. Modern research confirms that at typical skincare concentrations, no meaningful reaction occurs. They can be used together and many dermatologists do exactly that.
Niacinamide is a morning and evening ingredient with no restrictions on timing. Apply it after cleansing and toning, before heavier moisturizers and SPF. It sits comfortably in the middle of a routine — after water-based serums like hyaluronic acid, before creams and oils. It does not need to be applied to damp or dry skin specifically, and has no waiting time requirements between steps.It pairs well with retinol (helps buffer irritation), hyaluronic acid (complementary hydration approach), ceramides (supports the barrier work both ingredients do), and SPF (often already included in daytime formulas). No ingredient conflicts at standard skincare concentrations. If introducing multiple new actives at once, add niacinamide first — it is the easiest active to tolerate and will support your barrier as you adjust to stronger ingredients.
The most versatile active ingredient in skincare — and the one most people are already using without knowing it's in half their products.

The content in this Glow Lens entry is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing on this page constitutes medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional medical or dermatological guidance. The Glow Truth does not make claims about the diagnosis, treatment, cure, or prevention of any skin condition or medical issue. Individual results vary — skin type, health history, medications, and other factors affect how any ingredient performs. Always consult a licensed dermatologist, physician, or qualified skincare professional before adding new ingredients to your routine, particularly if you have a medical condition, are pregnant, are breastfeeding, or are currently using prescription skincare treatments.

D. Hector
D. Hector
Articles: 63