Skincare

Acne Facial Treatment in Chennai 2026 | YLG

April 7, 2026 · 10 min read

Getting a facial with active acne is one of the most misunderstood decisions in skincare. The wrong facial — one with steam, manual extraction or heavy massage creams — can turn a contained breakout into a full-face flare. The right one, specifically designed for acne-prone Indian skin, can reduce inflammation, prevent new breakouts and begin fading post-acne marks in a single session.

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Active Acne vs Post-Acne Marks: Very Different Treatments

The biggest mistake people make when booking an “acne facial” is not specifying what stage their skin is in. Active acne and post-acne marks require entirely different approaches.

Active acne involves live, inflamed lesions. The goal of treatment is to calm the immune response, kill acne bacteria (C. acnes) and prevent new pores from being blocked. Ingredients: salicylic acid, niacinamide, zinc, tea tree. Techniques: gentle lymphatic drainage, antibacterial mask, no harsh physical manipulation.

Post-acne marks are flat — either reddish-pink (post-inflammatory erythema) or brown (post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, more common in Indian skin). The goal is to accelerate skin renewal and reduce excess melanin. Ingredients: vitamin C, kojic acid, AHAs (glycolic/lactic acid), retinol. These ingredients are too active for use on inflamed lesions.

What Helps — and What Makes Acne Worse

This is the critical information most salon websites don’t share clearly.

What Helps Active Acne

  • Salicylic acid cleansing — dissolves sebum plugs in follicles without surface abrasion
  • ELT lymphatic drainage — reduces facial inflammation and speeds up the skin’s natural clearance
  • Niacinamide treatment — anti-inflammatory, sebum-regulating, no irritation
  • Antibacterial mask with zinc or tea tree — reduces C. acnes bacterial load on the skin surface

What Makes Active Acne Worse

  • Steam — opens inflamed pores further and facilitates bacterial spread to adjacent follicles
  • Harsh physical scrubs — create micro-tears that introduce bacteria deeper into the skin
  • Forceful manual extraction — ruptures pore walls internally, creating deeper, longer-lasting lesions
  • Heavy massage creams — comedogenic oils and thick emollients clog follicles
  • High-heat treatments — increase inflammation in already-inflamed tissue

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Combined Salon + Home Care Routine for Acne-Prone Skin

A salon visit every 3 to 4 weeks is the rhythm that works best for acne-prone skin. Between sessions, the following home routine maintains results:

  • Morning: Gentle gel cleanser (no SLS) → niacinamide serum → lightweight oil-free moisturiser → mineral SPF 50. Non-negotiable.
  • Evening: Double cleanse (micellar water then gel cleanser) → salicylic acid toner (2–3 nights a week) → benzoyl peroxide spot treatment on active lesions → lightweight moisturiser.
  • Weekly: Clay mask for 10 minutes to absorb excess sebum. No physical scrubs.

Understanding skin purging is also important when starting new actives: read our guide on best facials for oily skin in Chennai and monsoon skin care tips for seasonal advice.

Types of Acne and Which Facial Treats Which Type

Acne is not a single condition — it’s a spectrum of related skin presentations with different causes and appropriate treatments. Booking the right facial type starts with knowing which category your skin falls into.

Comedonal Acne (Blackheads and Whiteheads)

Non-inflammatory. Pores blocked with sebum and dead skin cells — open comedones (blackheads) oxidise and darken; closed comedones (whiteheads) remain covered. Most common on the nose, forehead and chin. Best treated with: salicylic acid cleansing, gentle extractions on open comedones, and ELT blue light to prevent bacterial colonisation of cleared pores.

Papular Acne (Red, Raised Bumps)

Mildly inflammatory. Red or pink solid bumps without a visible pus head. Bacteria has entered the follicle and triggered an immune response but hasn’t produced purulent material yet. Best treated with: niacinamide-focused treatment to reduce inflammation, ELT blue and amber light (antibacterial + anti-inflammatory), zero extraction.

Pustular Acne (Pimples with Pus)

Actively inflamed with a visible white or yellow head. Attempting manual extraction here is high-risk — if the pore wall is ruptured, bacteria spreads into surrounding tissue and creates a larger, deeper lesion. Best treated with: antibacterial mask (zinc or tea tree), ELT blue light, calming serum. Allow pustules to resolve naturally or with appropriate topical treatment.

Nodular and Cystic Acne (Deep, Painful Lumps)

Severe inflammatory acne. Nodules are solid, painful deep lumps without pus. Cysts are larger, fluid-filled and deeply embedded. A salon facial cannot and should not treat active nodular or cystic acne — these require dermatologist intervention, potentially isotretinoin or corticosteroid injections. A salon therapist should identify this and refer you appropriately rather than attempting treatment.

Post-Acne Marks (Not Active Acne)

Flat discolouration after acne heals. Post-inflammatory erythema (pink/red marks) is more common in lighter skin; post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (brown marks) is more common in Indian skin tones and responds more slowly to treatment. Best treated with: ELT red light (stimulates renewal), vitamin C and niacinamide serums, AHA exfoliation. These marks require consistent treatment over multiple sessions.

Key Ingredients in YLG’s Acne Facials — What Each Does

The ingredients used in an acne-specific facial determine whether it helps or harms. These are the actives used in YLG’s acne facial protocol and why each one is included.

  • Salicylic acid (0.5 to 2%): Beta-hydroxy acid that is oil-soluble — meaning it penetrates through sebum into the follicle. Standard AHAs (glycolic, lactic) cannot do this. Salicylic acid dissolves the sebum-dead skin plug at the source of comedonal acne and reduces inflammation in papular acne. Used in the cleansing and toning steps.
  • Niacinamide (4 to 10%): A form of vitamin B3 with multiple actions relevant to acne: reduces sebum production (sebum overproduction is the root cause of most acne), calms skin inflammation (reducing the redness of papules), inhibits melanin transfer (preventing post-acne hyperpigmentation formation). Non-irritating even on active acne — a rare combination of properties.
  • Clay (kaolin or bentonite): Used in the mask step. Clay has a strong negative charge that attracts and binds to positively-charged sebum, bacteria and toxins in the pore. A 10-minute clay mask on acne-prone skin absorbs significant quantities of excess oil and surface bacteria without disrupting the skin barrier.
  • Zinc (as zinc PCA or zinc gluconate): Antibacterial specifically against C. acnes bacteria, the primary acne-causing organism. Also inhibits 5-alpha reductase — an enzyme that converts hormones into a form that triggers excess sebum. Found in the antibacterial mask and some serums used in the protocol.
  • Tea tree extract (Melaleuca alternifolia): Natural antibacterial and anti-inflammatory. Studies comparing 5% tea tree gel to 5% benzoyl peroxide showed similar efficacy with significantly less dryness and irritation. Used in spot treatment applications within the facial protocol.
  • ELT blue light (415nm): Activates porphyrins naturally produced by C. acnes bacteria. When activated by blue light, porphyrins generate free radicals that destroy the bacteria from within. This is a non-chemical antibacterial mechanism with no risk of antibiotic resistance development.

Step-by-Step: What Happens During an Acne Facial at YLG

An acne-specific facial at YLG differs significantly from a standard facial. The protocol is designed around what the skin needs rather than what feels most luxurious.

Step 1 — Skin Assessment

Your therapist maps your skin under magnification: type and severity of acne, proportion of active lesions vs marks, skin tone, sensitivity level, oiliness. This determines the protocol. You’re asked about current medications, recent treatments and whether you use retinol or other active ingredients at home.

Step 2 — Salicylic Acid Double Cleanse

A salicylic acid-based cleanser is used as the primary cleanser (instead of the oil-based cleanse used in regular facials, which can clog acne-prone skin further). A second rinse-off step clears the skin completely.

Step 3 — Enzyme Exfoliation (No Physical Scrub)

A papaya or pineapple enzyme dissolves dead skin bonds chemically. Physical scrubs are never used on active acne — the abrasion spreads bacteria and creates micro-wounds. Enzyme exfoliation achieves the same result without any skin disruption.

Step 4 — Lymphatic Drainage (No Steam)

Gentle manual drainage replaces the steam step entirely. Steam on active acne opens inflamed pores further and facilitates bacterial spread — it’s one of the most counterproductive steps in a standard facial for acne skin. Lymphatic drainage reduces facial inflammation without heat stimulus.

Step 5 — Conservative Extraction (Blackheads Only)

Only ready open comedones (blackheads) are extracted — never pustules, papules or closed comedones. The extraction is done with minimal pressure using sanitised, sterile implements. Any extraction over an inflamed lesion is skipped entirely, regardless of how tempting the client may find it.

Step 6 — ELT Blue Light Treatment

15 minutes of blue light therapy. Targets C. acnes bacteria on the cleared skin surface. This is the step that differentiates a professional acne facial from home treatments — the light intensity used clinically is significantly higher than at-home LED masks.

Step 7 — Niacinamide Serum + Clay Mask

Niacinamide serum is applied immediately post-light. Clay mask follows for 10 minutes to absorb excess sebum and close pores. The mask is removed with cool water — never warm, which would re-dilate the pores just treated.

Step 8 — Oil-Free Moisturiser + SPF

A lightweight, non-comedogenic moisturiser is applied. SPF 50+ as the final step — mandatory both for sun protection and because many acne actives (salicylic acid, niacinamide) increase photosensitivity slightly.

What NOT to Do Before or After an Acne Facial

Small mistakes before and after an acne facial can undermine what the treatment achieves. These are the most common ones.

Before Your Acne Facial — Avoid

  • Physical scrubs or harsh exfoliation in the 48 hours before — this compromises the skin barrier before treatment
  • Trying to manually pop or extract lesions yourself — this creates open wounds the day of your appointment
  • Heavy foundation or thick sunscreen that requires aggressive removal to clear
  • New skincare products in the 48 hours before — don’t introduce unknowns before a treatment

After Your Acne Facial — Avoid

  • Touching your face repeatedly — transfers bacteria from hands to freshly-cleared pores
  • Sweaty gym sessions for 24 hours — sweat on freshly-cleared follicles causes new blockages
  • Heavy makeup for 4 to 6 hours — allows serums to absorb and pores to settle
  • Retinol for 48 hours — fresh skin doesn’t need accelerated turnover immediately post-facial
  • Sun exposure without SPF — post-acne marks darken rapidly on UV-exposed skin, undoing the brightening work of the facial

Why Chennai’s Climate Makes Acne Worse — and What to Do About It

Chennai’s combination of heat, humidity and pollution creates the ideal environment for acne to develop and persist. Understanding the mechanisms helps you make better decisions between salon visits.

Heat increases sebum production. The sebaceous glands produce more oil in response to temperature — this is a direct physiological response, not a hygiene problem. In Chennai’s summer months (March to June), sebum overproduction worsens significantly, which is why many clients who have controlled acne flare during peak summer regardless of what they do differently.

Humidity prevents sweat from evaporating. Sweat stays on the skin surface, mixing with sebum and creating a film that traps bacteria and blocks pores. The face — particularly the forehead, nose and chin (T-zone) — accumulates this most quickly. People who commute in Chennai traffic, or spend any time outdoors, experience compounded pollution exposure on top of this sebum-sweat mix.

Pollution adds a specific problem. Particulate matter from Chennai’s traffic (PM2.5 and PM10) settles on the skin surface and penetrates pores. These particles are pro-inflammatory — they trigger the same immune response as bacterial invasion, creating or worsening inflammatory acne in skin that isn’t breaking out from bacterial causes alone.

The practical response: double cleanse every evening without exception (removes the sebum-sweat-pollution film before it has overnight to cause damage), use a non-comedogenic sunscreen every morning (prevents UV-triggered inflammation from adding to your acne burden) and book professional acne facials every 3 to 4 weeks during the March to September peak season.

Acne Facial Price Guide at YLG Chennai (2026)

Acne-specific facials at YLG are priced based on the variant and the extent of ELT technology used.

Treatment Best For Approx. Price
ELT Anti-Acne Facial Active comedonal + mild inflammatory acne Rs 1,800 – 2,500
ELT Acne + Brightening Active acne + post-acne marks Rs 2,200 – 3,000
Anti-Acne Cleanup Mild breakouts, maintenance between sessions Rs 800 – 1,200
Post-Acne Mark Facial Marks only, no active acne Rs 1,800 – 2,500

Thursday bookings receive 50% off under YLG’s Thrilling Thursday offer. Confirm current pricing at ylgchennai.in/book.php. For the most targeted result, book a consultation with your therapist at the first appointment — they’ll recommend the most appropriate variant for your current skin state.

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Written by

The YLG Salon Team

Expert beauty insights from the team at YLG Salon Chennai — Adyar, Anna Nagar & Porur.

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