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Argan Oil: A Top Moroccan Remedy For Acne And Hyperpigmentation

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Can argan oil cure acne and hyperpigmentation?Argan oil is a fat extracted from the nut of the argan tree, native to the desert-bordering forests of South-West Morocco.

This natural oil has been used by Moroccan and Berber locals to protect their skin against the harsh sun for centuries. Alongside the traditional beauty treatment rhassoul clay, many Moroccan women use argan oil daily for keeping their skin soft and smooth.

You might therefore wonder whether argan oil is an acne miracle as well…

…and according to skincare and beauty forums, that’s exactly what argan oil is. It’s one of several natural oils that have achieved fame as people slowly wake up to the perilous dangers of accutane and antibiotics.

From Polynesia we have tamanu oil; from Ghana we have shea butter. Now we have argan oil, straight out of Morocco. The truth, right now, is that argan oil is excellent for acne. What you might not understand is why, and there’s several false rumours to put to bed.

For the top 9 argan oil brands for acne and skincare, read this article. Today, we will discuss exactly how argan oil can enhance your skin. 

 

Why argan oil is so excellent for acne

The tale is that argan oil is dripping with vitamin E, and for once, the reality matches this perfectly.

It beats olive oil and even grapeseed oil with ease. Grapeseed oil contains 27mg of vitamin E per 100 grams, already an excellent total for acne. Cold pressed argan oil contains 60mg. Argan oil contains high levels naturally; there’s no synthetic vitamin E added in the factory like with sunflower oil.

By applying argan oil you receive a hyper concentrated dose of vitamin E’s oral benefits: increased resistance to free radicals, clogged pores, and acne full stop. Ideally, most vitamin E should be obtained from your diet, but topical treatments like argan oil blast your skin with extra efficiency.

You might be wondering why you can’t simply use an actual vitamin E oil formulation. Firstly, many products use tocopheryl acetate as the specific vitamin E form. That’s a synthetic version which works to some extent, but lacks the natural co-factors and sub-compounds of real vitamin E. Argan oil’s vitamin E is 75% gamma tocopherol, but contains the seven other natural vitamin E forms as well.

Secondly, these products are often nothing but a thick, sticky solution of vitamin E itself. With natural oils, you get an assortment of bonus antioxidants and plant sterols.

Read Annihilate Your Acne – get the greatest diet ever for clear and radiant skin

Sea buckthorn oil is another vitamin E rich oil, and its plant sterols beta-sitosterol and stigmasterol can end oily skin. Argan oil itself has two rare plant sterols called schottenol and spinasterol. By choosing basic vitamin E oil, you lose these bonus powers even if it’s organic.

Finally, these products lack beneficial fatty acids such as linoleic acid. Pure vitamin E oil has its roles, like as an ultra-concentrated source, but natural oils come first. The one exception is natural oils such as argan oil which are enriched with natural vitamin E, making an already strong product stronger.

Grapeseed oil used to be the king of affordable vitamin E, but argan oil has dethroned it.

 

How do the two compare otherwise?

Argan oil one-ups grapeseed oil again with its comedogenic score of 0, giving argan oil “no chance” of clogging your skin pores and allowing p.acnes bacteria to multiply. Grapeseed oil is also low, but nevertheless higher at 2 out of 5. Argan oil can almost certainly clog skin pores in rare cases, but it’s a clear victory.

Argan oil also matches grapeseed oil with its moisturising properties, something no good skincare oil should be without. This study found that argan oil increased skin hydration significantly in healthy human beings.

The one area where grapeseed oil reigns supreme is its fatty acid profile. With variation among different brands, grapeseed oil contains an average of 70% linoleic acid and 16% oleic acid. Argan oil contains 33% and 46%.

With a topical skincare oil, the optimum is more linoleic acid and less oleic acid. Oleic acid weakens the human skin barrier in excess, while linoleic acid builds UV light resistance and prevents p.acnes bacteria overgrowth. Grapeseed oil contains enough linoleic acid to make a massive difference, being one of its main powers.

Next: the 6 vitamins and minerals which can massively reduce acne

Meanwhile, argan oil is in no man’s land. Neither the oleic nor linoleic acids are high enough to make a difference. The linoleic acid will only replenish skin that is extremely deficient in it. Likewise, the oleic acid will wreck havoc if you have an extreme sensitivity.

For vitamin E, argan oil easily surpasses grapeseed oil. That alone makes it a recommended remedy for acne.  The only oil covered here which beats argan oil for vitamin E is sea buckthorn berry oil. 

 

Argan oil for oily skin – the truth

The popular conception of argan oil’s main acne benefit is actually accurate, but there’s one belief which is murkier: that argan oil can end oily skin.

The origin was this human study from 2007. 20 human patients were gathered and treated twice daily with a cream consisting of saw palmetto extract, sesame seed, and argan oil. After 4 weeks, their total skin oiliness fell by 20%. Certain areas improved by 42%. 95% of patients experienced improvements.

This study quickly became legendary, but with two accompanying ingredients, it’s impossible to tell whether argan oil was really the miracle substance.

Furthermore, saw palmetto is among the most powerful herbal supplements around for oily skin, and it also works topically. Saw palmetto inhibits 5-alpha reductase, the enzyme which creates DHT, the most potent hormone at increasing sebum production.

The benefits could have been completely unrelated to argan oil. It’s hard to rely on these combined ointments normally, but with the saw palmetto, we’re completely derailed.

There’s still potential though, and it lies with two natural plant sterols. Plant sterols or phytosteroids are natural steroid compounds found across the plant kingdom. Two common ones are stigmasterol and beta-sitosterol, both of which inhibit the 5-alpha reductase enzyme that creates DHT; in fact, beta-sitosterol is why saw palmetto is so powerful.

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When applied topically, beta-sitosterol and stigmasterol can penetrate the skin and massively decrease sebaceous gland activity. That’s why sea buckthorn oil is excellent for oily skin: it’s loaded with these sterols, in addition to vitamin A. Turmeric is also rich in beta-sitosterol, and although they don’t know it, that’s why home remedy fans love it so much.

Argan oil lacks these widespread plant sterols and instead contains two very rare ones: schottenol, 48% of its total sterols, and spinasterol, at 40%.

It’s possible that these far more mysterious sterols have the same antiandrogen powers as beta-sitosterol and stigmasterol. Spinasterol has some strong evidence already, since it slashed levels of DHT in prostate tissue in this study. 

All we need is a study on schottenol, and argan oil might finally be confirmed as an oily skin weapon. For now, argan oil is unproven but interesting…

…and there is one pathway which is proven – the vitamin E. Vitamin E prevents squalene peroxide from forming, and thus prevents more local stimulation of the sebaceous glands.

 

Argan oil inhibits two out of three melanin enzymes

Does argan oil improve acne and acne scars?One traditional usage of argan oil is as a skin whitener, to keep the skin of Moroccan women light and fair. The good news is that argan oil can keep YOUR skin light, fair, even, and free from acne scars, for argan oil is an excellent hyperpigmentation remedy.

Intrigued by the ancient Moroccan wisdom, scientists finally confirmed the power with this 2013 study. Human cell lines were treated with whole Moroccan argan oil, rather than isolated compounds extracted from it. Levels of melanin accumulation were examined, after up to 72 hours of incubation in the oil.

Argan oil inhibited two of the three biggest players in hyperpigmentation: tyrosinase and dopachrome tautomerase. Total levels of melanin fell, dose dependently, and with it the pigmentation.

We’ve discussed the role of tyrosinase in hyperpigmentation. All melanin in your skin is manufactured from the essential amino acid tyrosine. Tyrosinase kick-starts the conversion, by converting tyrosine to a melanin precursor called DOPA, and then DOPA to the next precursor, called DOPAquinone.

Put an end to tyrosinase, and you put an end to hyperpigmentation. Meanwhile, dopachrome tautomerase (DCT) is an enzyme which enters the picture later, controlling more conversions until the final birth of melanin.

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72 hours of argan oil incubation decreased tyrosinase and DCT by 60% and 80% respectively. A 0.1% dilution of argan oil inhibited tyrosine substantially; even a 0.01% concentration succeeded.

As for the all-important end result: 1% concentration argan oil decreased the melanin levels of cells, and thus the pigment, by approximately 33% after 48 hours, and 64% after 72 hours.

The third big player, tyrosine related protein 1 (TRP1), fell by a disappointing 10%, but that’s two out of the three big hyperpigmentation enzymes.

The study didn’t confirm the specific miracle compound in argan oil, but two explanations were suggested: 1) vitamin E, which has a known skin-whitening effect, or 2) a combination of all the compounds in argan oil. In other words, anything could be responsible, including compounds which we haven’t discovered yet.

 

How do you apply argan oil?

Using full argan oil concentration is not necessary. There’s no problem with full concentration, but if you can easily mix with some grapeseed oil or tamanu oil and still reduce hyperpigmentation, since a 1% concentration reduced melanin excellently.

You should apply argan oil for a medium timespan. Reductions in melanin enzymes occurred after 4 hours, but they accelerated massively by the 48 hour mark and after 72 hours they peaked.

Argan oil falls between fast topical treatments like honey and slow ones like turmeric or green tea. Keep a thin layer on your face for three days, or nightly for a week.

You might look like you’ve discovered the joys of eating McDonalds for every meal, but hyperpigmentation is a one-time operation. You remove the darkened patch, the concentration of melanin, and enhance your skin tone; once the job is done, you don’t need the argan oil anymore. It’s different to acne where you constantly have to prevent it.

Eliminating acne is also convenient: applying the argan oil at night, over an eight hour sleep, will allow the vitamin E to soak in.

We also have the mysterious matter of sebum reduction. Compared to anti-inflammatory or antibacterial topical treatments, which can work in mere hours, oily skin treatments are by far the longest acting; they usually take weeks to work. This rule applies to green tea, sea buckthorn oil and turmeric.

Argan oil will likely share this characteristic, but again, the powers aren’t proven to exist. The long and gruelling application is therefore another reason to brush this theory under the carpet until more evidence arrives.

 

The best argan oil product

Argan oil follows the standard acne oil blueprint. Cold pressed, with a natural odour resembling the nut from whence it came, and with a richer colour.

Odourless is a sure sign that your argan oil is overly processed, deodorised and useless. Foul smelling is identical: the processing has made it rancid and the opposite of beneficial for acne. A delicious nutty smell suggests that it’s a culinary argan oil, where the nuts will have been roasted beforehand with a loss of nutrition.

The perfect argan oil for acne will have a nutty smell which is less enticing, but aromatic and distinct. Some claim that argan oil smells pretty unpleasant, but in a natural way, without the clear foulness of a rancid oil. If your argan oil doesn’t get your mouth watering, but still smells natural, you’re probably in business.

Here’s a guide to the 9 best argan oil products for acne

Your ingredients label should say 100% Argania Spinosa Kernel Oil or 100% argan oil. Nothing else is required. A clear and pristine argan oil looks attractive, but is in fact highly processed, to make a uniform-looking product. The result is much less nutritious than an unprocessed, cloudy, murky oil, so the latter is what you must buy.

Luckily, almost all argan oil production is controlled by local villagers in Morocco, who insist on maintaining their old traditions rather than selling out to factory chemicals. The factory machinery which they do invest in, now that business is booming, is high tech cold-pressing machinery, which is perfectly fine. Poor quality argan oil is rarer than with grapeseed oil (where it’s an epidemic), but it does exist occasionally.

If argan oil sounds like the topical treatment for you, you cannot go wrong with this Organic Argan Oil by InstaNatural.  

 

 

Conclusion

Argan oil joins grapeseed oil and tamanu oil as an excellent natural oil for acne, and stays away from olive oil and juniper berry oil as a failed one.

It isn’t a miracle tonic which will give you the skin of a god overnight. No treatment on earth will clear every acne patient universally. Even zinc and selenium fail occasionally, for reasons as simple as the user already consuming enough, or more complicated reasons.

That’s why it’s great to have so many natural options. There’s enough plants and oils in nature that if your acne holds out against one remedy, it will doubtlessly fail against another.

People who particularly stand to benefit from argan oil are…

  • People with old acne scars or an uneven skin tone, from years of acne.
  • People with oily skin. Argan oil’s vitamin E will make it tolerable.
  • People who need a natural, chemical-free moisturiser.

If your enemy is oily skin, then sea buckthorn oil is the best option. If you want to cast p.acnes bacteria into exile, choose raw honey. Argan oil can reduce existing acne scars superbly, but for accelerating wound healing and preventing acne scars from forming in the first place, aloe vera or tamanu oil are your allies.

Overall, there’s a strong chance that if you apply argan oil for three or four weeks, your acne will improve more than you can possibly imagine. Anyone with acne stands to benefit. 

NEXT: the ultimate diet for clearing acne permanently

 

Thanks for reading!

 

29 thoughts on “Argan Oil: A Top Moroccan Remedy For Acne And Hyperpigmentation”

  1. Avatar photo

    So Richard as you mentioned above I can mix it with grapseed oil and tamanu oil and apply till it gets detanned ??? Will it harm the skin if I keep using contionusly ????

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    Richard Wolfstein

    Possibly! IF you want purely vitamin E and moisturisingv properties then just use grapeseed oil. I doubt that your skin would completely lose its pigment though, just from a random oil. To remove acne scars you can simply use argan oil until they’re gone.

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    Can you please tell theirs uses I’m bit confused really Richard sorry !!! I am about to buy but confused still

    Argan oil – good source of vitamin E -detan
    Grape seed oil -good moisturiser
    sea buckthorn –
    Sea butter-
    Tamanu oil –

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    As I went through your post, both the grapeseed oil and argan oil are good source of vitamin E but I don’t understand why you suggest only argan oil to remove acne scars

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    Argan oil, grapeseed oil = both great sources of vitamin E, with argan oil being better. Only argan oil has the ability to reduce acne scars and hyperpigmentation. Grapeseed oil has never been shown to reduce hyperpigmentation in studies.

    Sea buckthorn oil is effective for oily skin specifically. Shea butter is an excellent acne-friendly moisturiser, but not as strong for acne itself. Tamanu oil is strong for acne, but in different ways – killing p.acnes bacteria and accelerating wound healing. If your main goal is to eliminate acne scars AND acne at the same time, argan oil is the best choice.

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    For killing acne bacteria -raw honey,,royal jelly,tree oil
    Anti inflammation-aleovera,, rose water

    To unclogged the pores- grapeseed oil
    To reduce acne scars – argan oil

    So sir I’m thinking to buy these and use them regularly alone in future .please correct me if wrong ……I won’t drag after this ?

  7. Avatar photo
    Richard Wolfstein

    I wouldn’t buy all of those, one of each is enough: e.g, raw honey, aloe vera, and argan oil, to have one from each category. I wouldn’t use grapeseed oil AND argan oil at the same time. Anyway, you won’t need to try so many different products, you might succeed with just one. I would use argan oil to start with, and then if your acne scars fade away, switch to grapeseed oil. Or you could start with a raw honey/argan oil combo, and later switch to a grapeseed oil/raw honey combo. The choice is yours, but buying every single one of the treatments you listed is pointless.

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    Hi! I have a few scars and marks I’d like to try and reduce using Argan oil. However, I have freckles and was wondering if those would fade? How would I apply this as well and how frequently? And is it possible to mix with sea buckthorn oil or even necessary? Thank you.

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    If they came from sun exposure then definitely. It’s not necessary to mix with sea buckthorn oil at all, but you can easily if you want. They have very different powers – argan oil for hyperpigmentation, sea buckthorn oil for oily skin, while both are very rich in vitamin E. Make sure you buy sea buckthorn berry oil, not seed oil.

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    Daily – my recommendation is before bed to avoid looking greasy all day. Also gives you time for the oil to soak in and exert its benefits, particularly with the vitamin E.

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    i already have very light skin, so should i have to worry about any possible “over lightening” side effects? cause im in serious need of some hyperpigmentation reduction, and i just bought the argan oil you recommend. also could you do an article on hyperpigmentation in general, and all the treatments for it, natural and other?

  12. Avatar photo
    Continuing treatment

    Hi,

    I have read that hyperpigmentation never really goes away forever and that you have to keep applying topicals to supress melanin. What are you thoughts and what do you think about stabilized vitamin C serums for hyperpigmentation?

  13. Avatar photo

    Hello,

    Can you please explain how linoleic acid helps to fortify the skin against the sun? I have read sources that say PUFAs can cause skin damage under the sun..sorry a bit confused!

  14. Avatar photo

    Hello Richard!
    First just want to start off by thanking you… though I could never thank you enough. You’ve really turned my skin around and helped me realize how off track I once was.

    I eat super clean and make sure to always be ingesting zinc, vitamins a&e, along with selenium, all in their most natural forms (other than zinc)

    I guess I’m just trying to understand more so what to do topically. For the past year I’ve been washing only with cool water (no soaps) then putting the thayers witch hazel on my face, followed by aloe (we have tons of aloe plants growing in the house). I do this every morning and some nights. I do have oily skin so I recently started putting the sea buck thorn oil on after the aloe in the mornings. I still seem to occasionally break out once in awhile along the jawline. Just bought some grape seed oil to start putting on at night (since I use the buckthorn in the morning). I was excited to start the grape seed but now after reading about Argan I’m not sure if maybe I should try it instead. You say that the Argan helps with acne scars… does it help fade actual scars or does it really only fade the reddened hyper-pigmentation? I have many scars (ice pick, rolling/box car) but I don’t really think I have hyper-pigmentation. I have reddened inflamed pimples at times but that usually fades in a couple weeks…unless I’m just confused and that IS hyper-pigmentation?
    I’ve recently started getting acne on my back and cannot figure out why (which is why I bought the grape seed oil in the first place), I was hoping to reduce what is popping up all over my back. The pimples eventually fade and I’m left with a light spot on my back… is that hyper-pigmentation?

    Id be so thankful if you could clear up my confusion on hyper-pigmentation, if Argan helps actual scars, if I should go with argan or grape seed, and if you think any of my routine needs tweaked.
    Sorry this turned out so long and again thank you for all your in depth research. Your changing lives. Cheers!

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    It’s not going to get rid of proper scars where the protein structures have permanently altered with the skin becoming rougher, but some of the scars may actually be hyperpigmentation in disguise. You have a good chance of improving any scar where there’s variation in colour, and always remember that for more stubborn scars, improving your skin tone (acquiring the fabled glow) magically makes everything look better and less intrusive, whether it’s living pimples or scars.

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    The only risk with PUFAs is that they’re vulnerable to oxidation which means that when exposed to sunlight, after you’ve applied them topically, they can generate free radicals which could damage your skin. However, cold-pressed grapeseed oil is rich enough in antioxidants to prevent this, and I recommend applying it overnight anyway. As for UV protection it’s the increase in ceramide proteins which achieves this.

  17. Avatar photo

    Hello,

    Can you please explain the different actions of omega 6 and omega 3 when applied topically on the skin? Do acne sufferers benefit at all from topical omega 3 or just omega 6 (if their acne is exacerbated by omega 6 deficiency that is)?

  18. Avatar photo

    Hi there,
    I have just starting using a B serum and argan oil mixed with jojoba at night and my skin has broken out terribly. Could it be purging from skin cell turnover being sped up by B serum or is it likely that jojoba doesn’t suit me? Should I stop everything or.just continue with some or one of the products?
    Many thanks

  19. Avatar photo

    I would switch oils to grapeseed oil instead, argan oil is more likely to cause irritation due to higher levels of oleic acid. IF you’re sure that this new topical regimen was responsible and not lifestyle/diet factors (like a sugary meal the day before).

  20. Avatar photo

    HI Richard how are you ?
    is this forum active ??? need your suggestions for Argan oil its very hard to find the oils you suggested in Amazon now a days please post ur reviews if you are free thanks

  21. Avatar photo
    Richard Wolfstein

    Greetings Selva, there’s still plenty of well-produced argan oil brands, ArtNaturals is one of the best value for money among the organic, pure, properly manufactured ones: https://www.amazon.com/ArtNaturals-Pure-Morrocan-Argan-Oil/dp/B0186JDIUU

    You can also see my article about the top 9 brands: https://supernaturalacnetreatment.com/9-best-argan-oil-products-acne-skincare/

    Stick to those 9 and you will be OK. There are still scammers circling the argan oil market but slowly but surely, they’re being defeated. It’s actually relatively easy to buy a high quality argan oil compared to say, grapeseed oil, because the local Berber population of Morocco tightly controls the production.

  22. Avatar photo

    Hi I am using AHA 10% lotion. Which one will be effective when compared to reduce pigmentations? Argan oil or AHA 10% ?

  23. Avatar photo

    Hi Richard can you tell a good skin care routine for my skin from the things you came across like cleanser, moisturiser and toner please ? My skin is oily mostly in the T Zone

  24. Avatar photo

    Hello,
    Does suppressing melanin production lead to the skin being more susceptible to the sun?
    Many thanks

  25. Avatar photo

    Thereoretically yes, but it is most likely that Argan oil only lightens areas of excessive melanin, like hyperpigmentation patches. I doubt that it will lighten your whole skin enough to make sunlight a problem.

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