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Sun damage

Sun damage is the cumulative record of every unprotected day your skin has spent in UV light. It shows up as brown spots, blotchy tone, rough texture, broken vessels, and fine lines. WLC certified providers treat it with light-based, laser, and resurfacing protocols matched to your skin and the depth of damage. 

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Overview

What Is Sun Damage?

Sun damage is the long-term injury UV radiation causes to the skin’s DNA, collagen, elastin, and pigment-producing cells. Two wavelengths drive most of it. UVA penetrates deep enough to break down structural proteins. UVB damages surface cells and triggers irregular melanin production. The result is a mix of pigment changes, texture changes, vascular changes, and accelerated aging that builds quietly over decades before becoming visible.

Most patients first notice sun damage in their thirties or forties on the face, neck, chest, hands, and forearms. The skin reads older than it should. Tone is uneven, spots have appeared, pores look larger, and fine lines have set in around the eyes and mouth. Some of these changes are reversible with the right treatment. Others, like deep wrinkles and severe laxity, respond best when addressed early.

 

Common Types of Sun Damage

Sun damage shows up in different ways depending on skin type, lifetime exposure, and genetics. Most patients have more than one pattern at once. Identifying the type matters because treatments are not interchangeable. A laser that clears pigment will not soften texture, and a resurfacing protocol will not target vessels. 

Sunspots and Solar Lentigines

Sunspots, also called solar lentigines, are flat brown patches that appear on areas with the most cumulative exposure: face, hands, chest, shoulders. They sit in the epidermis and respond well to pigment-targeted lasers, IPL, and BBL. New spots in adulthood are sun-driven, not age-driven. 

Hyperpigmentation and Uneven Skin Tone

UV exposure pushes melanocytes into overproduction, creating diffuse patches of darker pigment rather than discrete spots. Skin reads blotchy in photos and resists makeup correction. Pigment-specific lasers, chemical peels, and topical regimens work in combination, and consistent SPF is what keeps results from rebounding. 

Photoaging Fine Lines and Wrinkles

UVA breaks down collagen and elastin in the deeper dermis. That is what creates the fine crepey lines around the eyes, upper lip, and cheeks long before age would produce them on its own. Resurfacing lasers and ablative protocols rebuild collagen by triggering controlled wound healing. 

Rough and Uneven Skin Texture

Years of sun exposure thicken the outer skin layer and disorganize the cellular turnover underneath. The result is a rough, dull surface with a grainy quality under light. Fractional resurfacing, chemical peels, and microneedling soften this pattern by replacing damaged surface cells with healthier ones. 

Broken Capillaries and Vascular Damage

UV light weakens the walls of small blood vessels in the dermis. Over time, these vessels stretch, break, and stay visible as red threads or diffuse flushing across the cheeks and nose. IPL and vascular lasers collapse these vessels selectively without affecting surrounding skin. 

Actinic Keratosis and Precancerous Changes

Actinic keratoses are rough, scaly patches caused by UV damage to surface skin cells. They are considered precancerous and can progress to squamous cell carcinoma if left untreated. Any patient with actinic keratosis should be evaluated by a board-certified dermatologist before pursuing cosmetic treatment. 

What Causes Sun Damage?

Sun damage is cumulative. Every minute of unprotected exposure is recorded in the skin, and the consequences show up decades later. Some causes are obvious. Others, like incidental sun through windows or repeated short exposures during daily activity, account for more damage than most patients realize. 

UVA and UVB Radiation

UVA penetrates deep into the dermis, breaking down collagen and elastin and driving the visible signs of aging. UVB hits the outer skin layer, causing sunburns, pigment changes, and direct DNA damage. Both contribute to skin cancer risk, and both pass through clouds and car windows. 

Cumulative Sun Exposure

Most sun damage comes from incidental exposure over decades, not from a few intense burns. Driving, walking outside, sitting near windows, and brief outdoor activity all add up. By the time damage is visible, the underlying changes have been building for twenty to thirty years. 

Tanning Beds and Artificial UV

Tanning beds emit UVA at concentrations several times higher than midday sun. They accelerate every category of sun damage and significantly increase the lifetime risk of melanoma. The World Health Organization classifies tanning bed UV as a Group 1 carcinogen, alongside tobacco. 

Insufficient SPF Protection

Most patients underuse sunscreen. Daily SPF 30 or higher, applied to face, neck, chest, and the backs of the hands, is the single most effective intervention for preventing further damage. Reapplication every two hours during outdoor exposure is what makes the difference. 

Collagen and Elastin Breakdown

UV exposure activates enzymes that degrade collagen and elastin faster than the skin can rebuild them. Over time, this imbalance produces wrinkles, laxity, and the leathery texture associated with chronic sun exposure. The process is invisible until the structural loss becomes visible at the surface. 

Genetics and Skin Type

Skin type determines how UV damage presents. Lighter skin (Fitzpatrick I and II) shows earlier pigment changes and a higher rate of precancerous lesions. Darker skin (Fitzpatrick IV through VI) holds melanin defenses longer but is more prone to post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation and stubborn melasma. 

Treatments That Remedy Sun Damage

Treating sun damage means matching the technology to the layer where the damage lives. Pigment, vessels, texture, and deeper structural change each respond to different wavelengths and depths. A certified provider will assess your skin in person, identify the dominant patterns, and build a sequenced plan rather than a single treatment. 

BBL delivers pulsed light across a broad wavelength range, targeting both pigment and vascular concerns in one device. Forever Young BBL is a specific protocol shown in research to slow visible aging when used consistently. Most patients need a series of three to five sessions.

IPL uses intense pulsed light to break up surface pigment and small vessels. It is ideal for diffuse sun damage on the face, chest, and hands. Downtime is minimal: pigmented spots darken for about a week and flake off, leaving clearer, more even skin underneath.

HALO combines ablative and non-ablative wavelengths in a single pass, treating surface pigment and deeper dermal damage at the same time. Results include visibly clearer tone, smoother texture, and improvement in fine lines, with three to five days of social downtime.

Pigment-specific lasers target melanin clusters at the depth where they sit, breaking them up so the body clears them. This category includes Q-switched and picosecond platforms used for stubborn spots, deeper hyperpigmentation, and patients whose pigment has not responded to lighter treatments.

Chemical peels exfoliate sun-damaged surface cells and stimulate fresh skin growth. Lighter peels like BioRePeel and VI Peel work for early pigment and texture issues. TCA and Jessner peels go deeper and address more severe damage in patients who can tolerate a week of visible peeling.

Ablative fractional lasers (CO2, Erbium) are the most aggressive option for sun damage. They vaporize columns of damaged tissue to trigger major collagen rebuilding. Downtime runs seven to ten days, but a single treatment can address what would take multiple sessions of lighter modalities.

Sun damage sets the conditions for several other concerns to develop or intensify, often appearing together across the same skin.

Hyperpigmentation

Hyperpigmentation is the broader category that sun-driven brown spots fall under. It includes post-inflammatory marks from acne, hormonal patches, and discoloration from injury. UV makes every type of hyperpigmentation darker and more stubborn, which is why daily SPF is part of every pigmentation protocol.

Fine Lines

The fine lines around the eyes, mouth, and forehead are often the first visible result of sun damage. UVA degrades the collagen and elastin that keep skin smooth at rest, so lines appear earlier in people with high UV exposure than in people who protect their skin consistently.

Melasma

Melasma is a pigment disorder triggered by hormones, heat, and UV exposure. Even minimal sun raises melasma patches, so treatment requires aggressive sun protection alongside topical agents and gentle laser protocols. Aggressive lasers can worsen melasma, which is why provider experience matters.

Sagging Skin (Skin Laxity)

Sun-damaged skin loses elasticity faster than protected skin. The collagen and elastin breakdown driven by UV exposure is the same mechanism that causes laxity in the cheeks, jawline, and neck. Patients with significant sun damage often see laxity earlier and need combined resurfacing and tightening protocols.

Dull Skin

Dullness is the visible signal of accumulated sun damage on the skin surface. Damaged cells stack up, light reflects unevenly, and the complexion loses the clarity it once had. Gentle resurfacing, professional facials, and consistent retinoid use restore reflectivity without the downtime of laser treatment.

Uneven Texture

UV exposure thickens patches of skin while thinning others, creating a rough, uneven surface. The pattern is most visible under directional light and in close-up photographs. Resurfacing technologies, chemical peels, and microneedling smooth texture by triggering coordinated cellular turnover across the affected areas.

Frequently Asked Questions

Some of it. Pigment, surface texture, and broken capillaries respond well to treatment. Deeper collagen and elastin loss can be improved significantly but not erased completely. Earlier treatment produces better results. 

When it appears. Most patients see early signs in their thirties. Treating sun damage early is less aggressive, takes fewer sessions, and prevents the deeper changes that require ablative resurfacing later. 

Results last as long as you protect the skin. Daily SPF, sun-protective clothing, and consistent skincare extend results indefinitely. New damage from unprotected exposure will eventually undo what treatment has cleared.  

Yes, when matched correctly. Several lasers and IPL devices are not suitable for Fitzpatrick IV through VI. A certified provider will recommend pigment-safe options such as picosecond lasers and gentle chemical peels. 

Most light-based and laser protocols require three to five sessions spaced four to six weeks apart. Ablative resurfacing often achieves the result in one session, with longer downtime as the trade-off. 

Sources & studies

The information presented on this page is supported by data and insights from the following trusted sources:

Photoaging, sun protection, and skin cancer prevention resources.

Actinic Keratosis and Photoaging.

Actinic Keratosis Overview.

IARC Monographs Volume 100D: Solar and UV Radiation (Group 1 carcinogen classification for UV-emitting tanning devices).

All sources are reviewed for accuracy and credibility to ensure the content remains reliable and up to date.

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