Buying the right products starts with knowing your skin. Answer a few quick questions and I'll tell you whether you're oily, dry, combination, normal, or sensitive — and where to start.
I keep mine simple and kind to my skin. I'll send you the uncomplicated steps that actually work — want them?
Figuring out your skin type sounds like it should be obvious, but it trips a lot of people up — myself included when I first started reading about this. The good news is you don't need fancy equipment or a quiz with thirty questions. You mostly need a clean face and a little patience. Once you know your type, choosing products gets so much simpler, because you stop guessing and start matching what your skin actually needs.
There are five commonly recognized skin types. You'll likely recognize yourself in one of them pretty quickly.
Here's the simplest, most reliable way to check, and it costs nothing.
Now read the signs. If your whole face looks shiny, you're likely oily. If it feels tight or looks flaky, you're likely dry. If only your T-zone is shiny while your cheeks feel fine or tight, that's combination. If it feels comfortable and balanced all over, that's normal. And if at any point during this your skin stung, itched, or turned red, lean toward sensitive regardless of the other results.
If you want a quick double-check, press a clean blotting sheet (or a tissue) against different areas of your face an hour after cleansing. Hold it to the light. A sheet soaked from everywhere points to oily; barely any oil anywhere points to dry; oil only from the forehead and nose points to combination. It's the same idea as the bare-face test, just with a visual.
Once you know your type, the overwhelming wall of products narrows down fast. As a friendly starting framework:
Your type can shift with seasons, age, and climate, so it's worth re-checking now and then. Skin that's oily in a humid Florida summer might lean drier in a cold, dry month. Listen to what it's telling you rather than locking yourself into one label forever.
This is meant as a simple, friendly way to understand your skin — not a diagnosis. If you're noticing persistent redness, breakouts that won't calm down, painful patches, or anything that worries you, please check in with a dermatologist who can look at your skin in person. Once you've got your type sorted, you might enjoy poking around my other free tools to plan a routine that fits it. Keep it simple, be patient, and let your skin lead.
I share new recipes, faith notes, and what I'm learning lately. Pop your email in and I'll send them your way — no spam, ever.