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By Jillian Caldwell, MS, PA-C

Published 2026-05-15

Chemical Peels in Houston

Chemical peels are one of the most reliable skin treatments we have, and one of the most misunderstood. A peel is not a brand or a product - it is a category that includes everything from gentle weekly-strength glycolic acid all the way through deep phenol peels that require sedation. The right peel for you depends on your skin type, your goals, what other treatments you are doing, and the time of year (Houston summers and retinol-style peels do not mix well).

At MV I focus on light and medium-depth peels - the range where you get meaningful clinical results without the downtime of deeper resurfacing procedures.

Considering chemical peels in houston? Start with a consultation.

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What it treats

  • Dull skin texture and tone
  • Hyperpigmentation and post-inflammatory pigment
  • Mild to moderate acne
  • Fine lines and early photoaging
  • Uneven absorption of skincare products
  • Some types of melasma (with caution)

Products used in this treatment: Glycolic acid peels (light), Lactic acid peels (light, hydrating), Salicylic acid peels (light, acne-prone skin), TCA peels (medium-depth), Jessner peels, Combination protocols matched to skin type

How I think about which peel is right for you

The decision starts with your Fitzpatrick skin type. Patients with deeper pigment (Fitzpatrick IV through VI) need careful peel selection because aggressive peels can cause post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation that takes months to resolve. For these patients I tend to start with lactic acid or low-percentage glycolic.

For patients with photo damage and fine lines (often Fitzpatrick I to III with sun exposure history), TCA at the right concentration delivers real improvement in tone and texture in 2 to 3 sessions.

For acne-prone skin, salicylic acid penetrates the lipid layer of the follicle and works on active breakouts directly. I usually run a series of monthly salicylic peels alongside topical treatment.

For melasma, I am more conservative - melasma can be aggravated by heat and inflammation, and a peel that is too aggressive can make it worse rather than better. We pick the peel carefully and combine with strict daily SPF.

Houston-specific peel considerations

Houston summers complicate peel planning. UV exposure after a peel, especially a medium-depth peel, can cause hyperpigmentation in skin that is freshly resurfaced and especially photosensitive. I generally schedule deeper peels in the cooler months (October through March) and use lighter peels in summer with strict SPF compliance.

Humidity also affects how peels behave. The same percentage of glycolic acid behaves differently on skin that has been compromised by months of sweat-and-AC-cycling than on the same skin in winter. We adjust accordingly.

What a peel appointment is like

Plan on 30 to 60 minutes depending on the peel. I cleanse and prep your skin, apply the peel solution in measured layers, neutralize if needed, and apply post-peel care. You will feel tingling, warmth, and at deeper peels brief sharp stinging. Light peels have almost no downtime - you will look flushed for a few hours. Medium peels will have visible flaking from days 3 to 7.

Aftercare that actually matters

  • Daily SPF 30 or higher is non-negotiable. This is the difference between a good peel result and a bad one.
  • No retinol, glycolic, salicylic, vitamin C, or other actives for 5 to 10 days after a peel.
  • No sweat-heavy workouts for 24 to 48 hours after a peel (matters in Houston summers especially).
  • Do not pick at any flaking. Let the skin shed naturally.
  • Gentle cleansers and bland moisturizers for the post-peel week.

When I steer patients away

  • Active herpes simplex outbreak in the treatment area.
  • Recent isotretinoin (Accutane) use within the past 6 months.
  • Pregnancy or breastfeeding for certain peel agents.
  • Active autoimmune skin disease in a flare.
  • Patients with very dark Fitzpatrick scoring who want aggressive peels - we go lighter and slower to avoid pigmentation issues.

Common questions about chemical peels in houston

Will I peel visibly after the treatment?
Depends on the depth. Light peels (glycolic, lactic) usually produce minimal visible flaking - you may not even notice it. Medium peels (TCA, Jessner) typically have visible sheet-like peeling from day 3 to day 7.
How many peels do I need?
Most goals need a series of 3 to 6 peels spaced 3 to 4 weeks apart, followed by a maintenance cadence (one peel every 1 to 3 months). The exact plan depends on what we are treating.
Is it safe for darker skin?
Yes, with proper peel selection. Lactic acid and low-percentage glycolic are well-tolerated across skin types. I am more cautious with TCA and stronger agents in Fitzpatrick IV through VI to avoid post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation.
Can I do a chemical peel and dermaplaning together?
Often yes. Dermaplaning first, then peeling about a week later, lets the peel solution penetrate more evenly. We do not usually combine them in the same session.
When is the best time of year for a peel in Houston?
Light peels work any time of year with careful SPF. Medium peels are best done October through March when Houston humidity and UV are lower. Summer peels are absolutely doable but require strict sun protection.
Does it hurt?
Light peels feel like a warm tingle. Medium peels have brief sharp stinging for a minute or two as the solution sets. I time everything carefully and most patients describe it as uncomfortable rather than painful.

Ready to talk?

Want to know if this is right for you?

Book a consultation with Jillian and we will talk through your options honestly.

The content on this page is for educational purposes and reflects Jillian Caldwell's clinical perspective. It is not medical advice. Individual results vary. Suitability for any treatment is determined at a private consultation. Clinical services at MV Medical Aesthetics are delivered under physician supervision.