A long workday, a too-busy schedule that knocks you out as soon as you get home, and then, the inevitable happens: you break skip your usual routine, and go to bed in a full face of makeup. Maybe it happens a few times a month; maybe it’s become a habit.
In a recent survey, one out of four British women confessed to sleeping in makeup at least twice a week—and if you ask us, it’s safe to assume the same goes for beauty aficionados worldwide. One journalist decided to test out the effects of this and went 30 days without removing her makeup, only to have a dermatologist tell her the experiment aged her skin 10 years. Turns out, your complexion might age two-plus days for every one time you skip cleansing at night—and the effects can be cumulative. “The evening is a time to replenish the skin. If you cleanse and apply age-defying products with antioxidants at night, they prep your skin so it’s ready to conquer the next day,” says Dr. Elizabeth Hale, M.D., a dermatologist and clinical associate professor of dermatology at NYU School of Medicine.
When you sleep in makeup or don’t properly cleanse and exfoliate, “your skin is missing peak times to breathe and repair itself,” says Hale. This can not only age your skin dramatically but also put your skin at risk for any number of problems. First, you’re begging for more breakouts (you’re at an even higher risk in your 20s and 30s than in your teens, due to hormonal changes). Product build-up causes the size of your pores to increase, which is hard to treat if continually neglected—and on top of that, the pore-clogging effects dehydrate your skin. Sounds pretty scary, right? Well, don’t worry. Dr. Hale gave us some easy tips on how to keep your complexion clean and youthful, even if you’re always on the go.
A Healthy Night Time Routine
1: To make cleansing easy and low-maintenance, keep makeup wipes on hand. They can even get more residue off than washing your face. Hale uses Neutrogena Deep Clean Oil-Free Makeup Remover Cleansing Wipes.
2: Some key anti-aging ingredients to look out for in nightly face creams and moisturizers: antioxidants, peptides, and stem cells.

3: To get a deeper clean and exfoliate, Hale recommends using Biore pore-cleansing strips or a cleanser containing salicylic acid with a cleansing brush.
<Insert 4D Cleansing Brush banner/shop now button> 4: For those who don’t have much of a budget, test Vaseline on your skin and see how it reacts, suggests Hale. It’s one of the best inexpensive hydrators that help keep skin looking youthful, and you can even apply some to eyelids! While many dermatologists recommend petroleum jelly to heal dry skin, some consumers are skeptical of it. Petroleum is a fossil fuel byproduct, so it’s not vegan-friendly; there are also claims floating around that it’s simply bad for the skin. Alba Botanica Un-Petroleum is a fairly affordable substitute. (It’s important to note that petroleum jelly is not synonymous with mineral oil, the byproduct of petroleum converted to gasoline. This is a common misconception!)
