GLOW

Skincare, minus the guesswork

Find your skincare routine in a 60-second quiz

Answer 7 quick questions and we match your skin — by type and concern — to 69 best-selling, dermatologist-loved products, then build a one-click Amazon cart. No login, no email, no overwhelm.

Browse the picks
  • ✶ No login
  • ✶ ~60 seconds
  • ✶ Checkout on Amazon
  • ✶ 72 researched products

How it works

  1. 1

    Take the quiz

    Skin type, goals, sensitivities, budget. Tap through it like a story.

  2. 2

    Get your routine

    A clean, ordered set of matched products — with the reason we picked each one.

  3. 3

    One-click cart

    Send your whole routine to an Amazon cart in a single click. Buy what you want.

Skincare routine guides

Prefer to read first? Each guide walks through a full routine for a skin type or goal, then hands off to the quiz.

Every product we recommend

72 hand-researched cleansers, serums, moisturizers, SPF, body care and deodorants — chosen for real reviews, sensible ingredients, and value across oily, dry, combination, and sensitive skin. The quiz narrows these to your match.

Cleanser

Best face cleansers for oily, dry, combination, acne-prone, and sensitive skin.

Serum / Treatment

Best serums and treatments for acne, dark spots, fine lines, and dullness — niacinamide, vitamin C, and retinol.

Moisturizer

Best face moisturizers for dry, oily, combination, and sensitive skin.

Eye Cream

Best eye creams for dark circles, puffiness, and fine lines.

Toner / Essence

Best toners, essences, and exfoliants for hydration and pore care.

SPF

Best face sunscreens (SPF) for daily wear — mineral and chemical, for oily and sensitive skin.

Body Lotion

Best body lotions and creams for very dry, rough, and bump-prone skin.

Deodorant

Best aluminum-free and clinical-strength deodorants, including sensitive-skin picks.

In what order do you apply skincare?

Layer thinnest to thickest so each product can absorb. A complete morning-to-night skincare routine follows this order:

  1. Cleanser — morning and night, to start with a clean base.
  2. Toner or essence — optional hydration and prep.
  3. Serum or treatment — your active step (vitamin C in the morning, retinol at night).
  4. Eye cream — gently pat around the eye area.
  5. Moisturizer — seal in hydration.
  6. SPF — every morning, the last step and the most important for preventing aging.

Not sure which products fit each step for your skin?

Common skincare questions, answered

Straight answers to the questions people actually Google, grounded in dermatology research.

How long until I see results from a new routine?

Skin renews on a roughly 4–6 week cycle, so most people notice smoother texture and a healthier glow after about a month of consistent use. Bigger changes like fine lines and dark spots take three cycles (12–24 weeks), and acne often eases around 6–8 weeks. Consistency beats any single product.

Do I really need sunscreen every day?

Yes. Up to 80–90% of visible facial aging (wrinkles, dark spots, sagging) comes from UV exposure, not age itself. Daily broad-spectrum SPF is the most proven anti-aging step, and UVA passes through clouds and windows, so it counts indoors too.

Is expensive skincare better than drugstore?

Usually not. What works comes from the active ingredients and formulation, not the price tag. Drugstore staples like CeraVe, The Ordinary, and La Roche-Posay are dermatologist favorites and fill much of our product list. Spend on proven actives (retinoids, vitamin C, SPF) and save on cleansers and moisturizers.

How often should I exfoliate?

For most skin, 1 to 3 times a week is plenty. Daily or aggressive scrubbing strips the skin barrier and causes redness, stinging, and more breakouts, not fewer. If your skin feels tight or looks irritated, scale back.

Can I use retinol and vitamin C together?

You can, but the simplest split is vitamin C in the morning (antioxidant protection under SPF) and retinol at night (renewal). Start retinol slowly, two or three nights a week, and always pair it with daily sunscreen.

What actually causes acne?

Acne is not about being dirty. It comes from excess oil, clogged pores, acne-causing bacteria, and inflammation, driven largely by hormones and genetics. Over-washing makes it worse. Gentle cleansing plus targeted actives (salicylic acid, benzoyl peroxide, or adapalene) is the evidence-based approach. See the acne-prone skin routine.

Do "natural" or "clean" products work better?

Not inherently. Natural and clean are not regulated terms, and natural does not mean gentler. Essential oils and botanical extracts are among the most common irritants. Judge a product by its ingredients and how your skin reacts, not its marketing.

How much product should I actually use?

More is not better. A pea-sized amount of retinol covers the whole face, a few drops of serum is enough, and sunscreen needs about two finger-lengths (a quarter teaspoon) for face and neck to reach its labeled SPF.

Skincare quiz FAQ

Is the GLOW skincare quiz free?

Yes — it is completely free, with no login or email required. If you buy through our Amazon links we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

How long does the skincare quiz take?

About 60 seconds. It is 7 quick questions about your skin type, goals, sensitivities, and budget.

How does checkout work?

We build a pre-filled Amazon cart from your routine. You review it and buy on Amazon at the same prices you would pay normally.

Are the products dermatologist-recommended?

We curate widely loved, dermatologist-favorite best-sellers across 72 products. The recommendations are informational and are not medical advice.

Do I need to buy every product?

No. The quiz tunes the routine to your goals and budget, and you can uncheck anything before you check out.

What order should I apply my skincare?

Cleanser, then toner or essence, serum or treatment, eye cream, moisturizer, and SPF in the morning. Apply thinnest to thickest so each layer absorbs.

Is GLOW for men and women?

Yes. The picks are unisex and gender-neutral, covering skincare and everyday hygiene.

How much does a skincare routine cost?

You choose how much to spend, from $40 to $500, and we fit the picks to it, keeping the essentials first. Many full routines come in under $100.