How Dermatologists Suggest Increasing Collagen in Your Skin

If you’re wondering how to boost collagen in your skin, you should know that depleting collagen is natural. The truth is, as we get older, we bid farewell to the collagen stores we enjoyed in our youth.

“Collagen is the scaffolding that supports the skin,” explains dermatologist Emma Craythorne, founder of Klira. “It’s a protein. If you press a baby’s cheeks, the skin bounces back – that’s because of the collagen that’s present.” The less collagen we have – and it’s worth noting it degrades at a rate of around one per cent a year from our mid-20s onwards – the more laxity in the skin, and the larger pores and wrinkles appear.

As always, prevention is better than cure. The more we can inhibit collagen breakdown, the better our skin will fare as we age. It will come as no surprise that the “number-one accelerator is exposure to ultraviolet radiation or UV light”, says Craythorne. There’s a reason why every dermatologist worships at the altar of broad-spectrum SPF (of at least factor 30), because as well as preventing skin cancer and hyperpigmentation, it’s essential to preserve collagen levels.

When you’ve got the art of preservation nailed, it’s time to actively pump up your collagen stores. As for how to boost collagen in your skin? “An easy at-home route is to use a prescription-grade retinoid,” says Craythorne. “Vitamin A acts like a hormone and passes messages to the fibroblasts in the skin’s dermis, instructing them to switch on and start making more collagen and hyaluronic acid,” she says. But if retinoids aren’t for you, then vitamin C has also been proven to support collagen synthesis.