If Your Skin Needs a Reset, a Vitamin C Serum Is Probably What’s Missing

Here's what to look for—and the formulas our editors actually use. The post If Your Skin Needs a Reset, a Vitamin C Serum Is Probably What’s Missing appeared first on Camille Styles.

If Your Skin Needs a Reset, a Vitamin C Serum Is Probably What’s Missing

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Experts agree: a vitamin C serum is the best single product you can add to your daily routine. It brightens, protects against environmental damage, and works alongside your sunscreen to minimize UV damage—and its benefits compound the longer you use it. But with so many options on the market, we went to the experts to find and test the best. Consider this your shortcut to a summer glow that actually lasts.

Featured image from our interview with Adrienne Mishler by Michelle Nash.

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The Expert

We tapped Dr. Heather D. Rogers—dermatologist, dermatologic surgeon, and founder and CEO of Doctor Rogers RESTORE—to walk us through everything you need to know about this wonder ingredient. She recommends daily vitamin C application to her patients and uses a vitamin C serum herself every morning on clean, bare skin, applied first to the face, neck, and upper chest before anything else.

Dr. Heather Rogers, MD

Dr. Heather Rogers is a Seattle-based board-certified dermatologist, dermatologic surgeon, and founder and CEO of Doctor Rogers Restore clean skincare.

What is vitamin C?

Vitamin C is an antioxidant molecule that protects your skin against free radicals caused by pollution and UV radiation—and plays a key role in collagen production. When free radicals penetrate the skin, Dr. Rogers explains, they break down collagen, contributing to sagging and wrinkles, and can stimulate the formation of brown spots and skin cancer.

An antioxidant works by collecting those free radicals and neutralizing them before they damage your cells. This is different from the protection sunscreen provides—which is exactly why the two work better together than either does alone.

What kind of vitamin C should I use?

Not all vitamin C is created equal, and the form matters as much as the percentage. The most common forms in skincare are L-ascorbic acid, ascorbyl palmitate, magnesium ascorbyl phosphate, ethyl ascorbic acid, and tetrahexyldecyl ascorbate—but what you’re really looking for is a well-formulated product that can actually get the ingredient deep enough into your skin to do its job. Multiple studies show that vitamin C serums stabilized with vitamin E offer the strongest protection against photo-aging. Formulation, not concentration, is what makes the difference.

How long does it take to see results?

Immediately, and over time—it does both. Vitamin C is a light reflector, so you’ll notice brighter skin from the first use. Its protective benefits kick in right away too. For longer-term effects like evening skin tone and reducing existing damage, most clinical studies measure results at 12 weeks, though you may start to see improvement at two. How quickly you see results depends on how consistently you use it, how well-formulated the product is, and how much existing damage your skin is working through.

How to Use It

Use it in the right order. If your vitamin C is a serum, apply it after cleansing or toning and before moisturizer. If it’s in your moisturizer, use it last.

Use it in the morning. You can apply it at night, but the morning is where it earns its keep—you’ll get an extra layer of protection against UV radiation right when you need it most.

Start with the right concentration. Sensitive skin: look for around 5%. If your skin is more resilient and you’re targeting more significant concerns, you can go higher.

A little goes a long way. More product isn’t more effective—it’s just more expensive. What actually moves the needle is consistency.

One thing to watch: if your serum changes color—from clear or pale straw to orange or brown—it’s oxidized and has lost its potency. Time to replace it.

Best Vitamin C Serums for Melasma and Dark Spots

The combination of high-potency vitamin C and Tranexamic Acid is one Dr. Rogers points to specifically for stubborn pigmentation—and sunscreen isn’t optional, it’s the whole point.

Best Vitamin C Serums for Sensitive Skin

If you’ve tried vitamin C before and your skin pushed back, it was likely a formulation issue—not the ingredient itself.

This post was last updated on June 17, 2026, to include new insights.