Australia's Beauty Authority · April 2026Newsletter Join Now
Vol. 01 · Issue 04Glow.Australia · Est. 2014
How-to Guide · April 2026

How to Treat Keratosis Pilaris (Chicken Skin)

Keratosis pilaris is genetic, lifelong, but manageable. The protocol below reduces visible bumps in 4-8 weeks.

The short answer

If you only read one paragraph.

Daily salicylic acid body wash. Glycolic acid body lotion 3× weekly. Heavy ceramide moisturiser daily. Avoid hot showers. Don't pick.

Step by step

The full method.

  1. Salicylic acid body wash daily. CeraVe SA Smoothing Cleanser. The single most-effective topical.
  2. Glycolic or lactic acid lotion 3× weekly. AmLactin or Eucerin Smoothing Body Lotion. Resurfaces over 4-8 weeks.
  3. Ceramide-rich moisturiser daily. CeraVe Moisturising Cream or Aveeno Skin Relief. Hydrates without occluding.
  4. Cool/lukewarm showers, not hot. Hot water strips skin. Cool extends barrier function.
  5. Don't pick or scrub aggressively. Picking creates pigmentation that lasts months.
  6. Patience: 4-8 weeks for visible change. Genetic condition. Treatment manages, doesn't cure.
  7. Consider tretinoin if persistent. Prescription topical retinoid. Stronger than over-the-counter, can dramatically improve KP.
Common mistakes

What to avoid.

  • Aggressive scrubbing (worsens redness and pigmentation).
  • Picking the bumps (creates scarring).
  • Using face products on body (wrong pH, often too gentle).
  • Hot showers (increases dryness and inflammation).
  • Stopping treatment when bumps clear (returns within 4-6 weeks).
Frequently asked

Common questions.

Will keratosis pilaris ever go away?

Genetic condition — usually manageable, rarely curable. Most clients see 70-80% improvement with consistent treatment.

Best body lotion for KP?

AmLactin (12% lactic acid), Eucerin Smoothing, or CeraVe SA. All have evidence for KP improvement.

Does diet affect KP?

Limited evidence. Some clients see improvement with anti-inflammatory diets. Most see better results from topical protocol.

Should I see a dermatologist?

If protocol shows no improvement at 8 weeks, yes. Tretinoin or in-clinic procedures may help severe cases.