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When to Start Anti-Aging Skincare (And the Three Things That Actually Matter)

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When to Start Anti-Aging Skincare: 3 Things That Matter

The honest answer isn't a number — it's three habits. Here's when to start each, and which expensive products you can safely skip.

By Orlune Editorial · May 11, 2026 · 7 min read

If you're asking when to start anti-aging skincare, the answer the industry wants you to hear is "yesterday, and here's a $400 cream." The honest answer is: it depends on which kind of aging you're trying to prevent.

Three habits, three timelines

Photoaging — sun damage — accounts for roughly 80% of visible facial aging. Daily SPF 30+ is the single most evidence-backed intervention. Start at age 5. There is no early or late.

Barrier integrity declines from your mid-20s as ceramide production slows. A barrier-repair moisturizer with omega-7 and squalane preserves bounce, smoothness, and that thing people call "glow." Start at 25.

Collagen turnover slows around 30 and drops sharply in perimenopause. A nightly retinoid plus an antioxidant serum (vitamin C, sea buckthorn) is the gold-standard pair. Start at 30 — earlier if you have acne or texture concerns.

What you can skip

  • "Eye creams" that are just moisturizer in a smaller jar
  • Collagen creams — the molecule is too large to penetrate
  • 10-step routines marketed as "prevention" — adherence beats complexity every time

Where sea buckthorn fits

Sea buckthorn covers two of the three habits in one ingredient: it's a potent antioxidant (collagen protection) and a barrier-repair powerhouse. Pair it with daily SPF and you've covered the science.

Frequently asked

Is 22 too early for retinol?

No — but unless you have acne or texture concerns, you'll get more bang for your buck from SPF and a barrier-repair serum first.

Do I need a separate eye cream?

Almost never. The skin around the eye is thinner but responds to the same ingredients. Use a small dot of your regular moisturizer.

What's the most over-hyped anti-aging product?

Anything marketed as "collagen" applied topically. The molecule cannot cross the stratum corneum. Antioxidants and SPF protect the collagen you have.

From the Orlune apothecary