Large Pores: What Causes Them and What Skincare Really Does
Pores cannot be opened or closed. This is anatomy, not product failure. What actually can be influenced is a different question.
Pores are the openings of sebaceous gland follicles in the skin. They are not muscles that can contract – their size is determined by genetics, sebum production, skin elasticity, and age. What is perceived as "pore size" is often the visibility of the pore: how full it is, how high the contrast it appears against its surroundings, how smooth the surrounding skin is.
Anatomy of the Pore
Each pore is the opening of a hair follicle with an associated sebaceous gland. Its size is primarily determined by the volume of the sebaceous gland and the amount of sebum produced: more sebum = larger gland = wider pore. Secondarily, the elasticity of the surrounding dermis plays a role: with decreasing collagen, the tissue loses its support – pores appear larger due to the lack of a framework.
Causes of Visible Pores
Genetics: Dominant factor – pore size is largely genetically determined. Excessive Sebum Production: Sebum fills and widens follicular canals. Age: Decline in collagen and elastin reduces structural support. Sun Damage: UV-induced collagen depletion accelerates visibility. Clogged Pores: Comedones (oxidized sebum plugs) mechanically stretch pores.
Pore care is not an illusion. It is patience: active ingredients applied consistently over weeks and months.
Myths: Steam, Ice Cubes, "Opening Pores"
Neither hot steam nor ice cubes permanently change actual pore size. Heat dilates blood vessels in the dermis (temporary redness) but does not alter the follicular opening. Cold temporarily constricts blood vessels. The narrative "cleanse open pores, then close them" is anatomically incorrect. What helps: regular cleansing prevents the accumulation of sebum and oil in follicular canals.
Active Ingredients with Evidence
Niacinamide (5%): Reduces sebum production, improves barrier, shows measurable pore refinement after 8–12 weeks. Retinol: Stimulates collagen synthesis (improves structural framework), normalizes keratinization in follicles, reduces comedones. Salicylic Acid (BHA): Oil-soluble, penetrates pores, dissolves sebum plugs. Ideal for acne-prone skin with pores. AHAs (Glycolic Acid): Improve surface texture and uniformity, optically smooth the area around the pore.
Skincare Routine for Pore-Conscious Skin
Mornings: Gentle cleanser, Niacinamide serum, SPF. Evenings: Gentle cleanser, optional Salicylic acid 2–3×/week, Retinol 2–3×/week (staggered with Salicylic acid), moisturizer. Consistency over months is more important than the concentration of individual applications.
Frequent Questions
Can I permanently shrink pores?
Not permanently – but visible size can be significantly reduced through regular care over months. Professional treatments (laser, microneedling) show stronger structural effects.
Which skin type is most likely to have large pores?
Oily and combination skin. The relationship between sebum production and pore visibility is direct: more sebum = more volume in the follicles = wider pore openings.
Are pore strips useful?
Pore strips temporarily remove surface sebum plugs. Without accompanying care, these quickly return. They are not a structural treatment, but can be used as a supplement.
Conclusion
Pore size is not a flaw that needs to be corrected. Those who understand the causes and have realistic expectations will find real efficacy in Niacinamide and Retinol – not magic, but solid science.
- Kang, S. et al. (2005). Application of retinol to human skin in vivo induces epidermal hyperplasia and cellular retinoid binding proteins. Journal of Investigative Dermatology.
- Bissett, D.L. et al. (2004). Niacinamide: A B vitamin that improves aging facial skin appearance. Dermatological Surgery.
- Draelos, Z.D. (2006). The effect of a daily facial cleanser for normal to oily skin on pore appearance. Cutis.