From underrepresentation in dermatology offices to harmful stereotypes about early puberty, Black patients with acne face barriers that go far beyond skincare.
June is Acne Awareness Month, but for many Black women, the conversation around acne has never really included them. The mirrors, the magazine pages, the after-school specials about teenage skin — none of it reflected what it actually felt like to grow up with acne in a Black body, measured against beauty standards that were never built with that body in mind.
For a lot of Black women, the wound is specific. It was not just the breakouts. It was watching a show like America’s Next Top Model and seeing Ebony Haith, a dark-skinned model with textured skin, face judgment from judges who delivered their criticism with clinical detachment. Haith carried herself with confidence throughout, but the message to viewers was hard to miss: certain skin was acceptable only when it was flawless. The bar for Black women was different, and everyone watching could feel it.
What the data says about acne and Black patients
A 2018 study found that Black patients are less likely to seek dermatological care for acne and less likely to receive adequate treatment when they do. The reasons are layered, but one thread runs through all of them: Black skin has historically been underrepresented in medical training materials, research, and clinical studies.
Hyperpigmentation and scarring, two of the most common aftereffects of acne in deeper skin tones, are often more severe and longer-lasting for Black patients. Yet these concerns have not traditionally been centered in dermatological practice. For many Black patients, a visit to a dermatologist ends with a prescription designed for a skin type that does not match their own.
Beauty expert Stixx Mathews has spoken about this gap directly, noting that Black skin requires different care and responds differently to many standard treatments. That knowledge exists among practitioners who specialize in it, but it is not evenly distributed across the field.
The skin positivity movement and who it actually centers
The broader skin positivity movement, which gained traction in the mid-2010s, has done meaningful work in normalizing acne. Campaigns like Louisa Northcote’s #freethepimple created space for people to show up in public with unedited skin. But the movement’s most visible faces have largely been white women, who received empathy, brand deals, and editorial coverage for their willingness to be vulnerable about breakouts.
Black influencers who put their acne on display in the same period did not receive the same response. The viral moments, the magazine features, the visible brand partnerships — those did not follow in the same way. The conversation was inclusive in theory but not in practice, and the disparity was noticed.
The stereotype that does real harm
Research by dermatologist V. Callender has pointed to a persistent misconception in how acne is understood across racial lines. One of the most damaging is the assumption that Black adolescents experience earlier puberty onset, which then gets used to explain why acne presents differently in Black patients.
The data does not support this framing. Studies have shown that earlier acne onset is more common in white patients, not Black ones. The stereotype does not just fail to explain anything useful. It deflects attention from the actual clinical picture and can lead to misdiagnosis, delayed treatment, and patients who leave appointments feeling dismissed.
What needs to change
Advocacy inside the medical space starts with training. Dermatology programs that do not include diverse skin tones in their clinical materials are graduating practitioners who are underprepared to treat a significant portion of the population.
It also starts with patients being believed. Black women who seek care for acne-related hyperpigmentation or scarring are not asking for vanity. They are asking for the same standard of treatment that other patients receive as a baseline.
The conversation is shifting. There are more Black dermatologists, more skin-focused platforms centered on deeper tones, and more patients who are unwilling to leave a dermatology office without real answers. Acne Awareness Month is a reasonable place to say what has long been true: awareness without inclusion is incomplete.

