Old scars on the face have a way of sticking around long after the cause is forgotten. Maybe it was childhood chicken pox, stubborn teen pimples, a kitchen burn, or a small accident. Years later, the marks remain, and every cream seems to do nothing. The frustrating truth is that most Pakistani blogs on this topic give bad advice, recommend lemon juice that quietly damages skin, and confuse two very different problems.
This guide explains exactly how to fade old scars on face safely, how to identify which type you actually have (because the treatment depends on it), and which ingredients genuinely help. No fairy tales, no harmful DIYs, just an honest plan.
How to Fade Old Scars on Face
The proven approach is:
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Identify your scar type. Dark spots, pitted scars, and raised scars all need different care.
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Use Vitamin C, niacinamide, or alpha arbutin daily for dark post-acne marks.
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Use silicone gel sheets or scar gel for raised or stretched scars.
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Use gentle retinoids or AHAs at night to speed cell turnover for pitted scars.
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Apply broad-spectrum SPF 50 every single morning, without exception.
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Be patient. Most old scars take 3 to 6 months to fade meaningfully.
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See a dermatologist for deep, pitted, or keloid scars. Some need lasers or microneedling.
The detailed sections explain how to tell which type you have, the home remedies that genuinely help, and the popular DIYs you should stop using immediately.
Scar or Dark Spot? The Difference That Changes Everything
This is the section every Pakistani blog skips, and it is the single most important one.
A dark spot (post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, or PIH) is not a true scar. It is flat pigmentation left behind after acne, an injury, or skin inflammation healed. The skin texture is normal, only the colour is darker. These fade well at home with the right ingredients in 2 to 6 months.
A true scar is a textural change in the skin, either raised, pitted, or stretched. The skin surface looks different from the area around it. These are far more stubborn and often need professional help to fully resolve.
Most "old scars" Pakistani users want to fade are actually dark spots from old acne. Those respond beautifully to consistent home care. Real textural scars need more than a face mask. Knowing which one you have is the first honest step.
Our parent guide on dark spots on face removal covers PIH in detail.
The Four Types of Old Scars on the Face
Once you have ruled out simple dark spots, true scars fall into one of four categories. Each needs a different approach.
1. Atrophic (Pitted) Scars
Small depressions in the skin, often from acne, chicken pox, or trauma. Subtypes include ice-pick (narrow and deep), boxcar (broad and angular), and rolling (wavy depression). These do not fade with creams alone because they are missing collagen below the surface.
2. Hypertrophic Scars
Raised, firm scars that stay within the boundary of the original injury. Common after burns, surgery, or deep acne. They respond well to silicone gel sheets, pressure, and sometimes steroid injections.
3. Keloid Scars
Raised scars that grow beyond the original wound. More common in Pakistani and darker skin tones. They need professional treatment because home remedies rarely make a meaningful difference.
4. Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation (PIH)
The dark, flat marks left behind after acne or injury heals. The most common "scar" type on Pakistani skin and the most responsive to home treatment.
If your marks are flat and only different in colour, you have PIH. If you can feel a depression, ridge, or texture change with your fingertip, you have a true scar. Many people have both at once.
How to Fade Old Scars on Face: The Real Approach
Follow this routine consistently for real change within 3 months.
Step 1: Cleanse Gently Twice a Day
Harsh cleansers worsen pigmentation. A gentle Vitamin C face wash clears the surface and introduces antioxidant protection in the same step. Morning and night.
Step 2: Treat With the Right Active
For dark spots, apply Vitamin C in the morning and niacinamide or alpha arbutin at night.
For raised scars, apply a silicone scar gel or use silicone gel sheets nightly. This is the most evidence-backed at-home treatment for hypertrophic scars.
For pitted scars, use a gentle retinoid or AHA at night to speed cell turnover. Pair with daily Vitamin C for slow but real improvement.
Step 3: Moisturise Daily
Hydrated skin heals and fades faster. A daily moisturiser like Herbsalot's Fairness Vitamin C face cream provides steady brightening alongside hydration without irritating the scarred area.
Step 4: SPF Is Non-Negotiable
Broad-spectrum SPF 50, every morning, without exception. UV light makes old scars darker, slower to fade, and more visible. According to the American Academy of Dermatology, daily sun protection is one of the most important factors in scar fading because UV worsens both pigmentation and collagen disruption (aad.org).
Step 5: Be Consistent
Old scars do not respond to weekly effort. They respond to daily, gentle, repeated care over months. Skipping days resets your progress.
Best Ingredients for Fading Old Scars
These are the evidence-backed actives that genuinely help.
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Vitamin C fades pigmentation, supports collagen, and protects against UV. The strongest brightening active.
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Niacinamide evens tone, reduces inflammation, and strengthens the barrier so new marks form less easily.
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Alpha arbutin slows melanin production safely for long-term use.
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Retinoids (over-the-counter retinol or prescription tretinoin) speed cell turnover and gradually smooth surface texture. Best for pitted scars.
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Salicylic acid (BHA) unclogs pores and reduces post-acne marks.
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Silicone gel is the gold standard at-home treatment for raised scars.
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Azelaic acid suits sensitive and acne-prone skin and gently fades PIH.
Home Remedies That Genuinely Help
These are safe, dermatologist-friendly options for fading dark marks and supporting overall skin healing.
Aloe vera gel. Apply fresh gel nightly. Supports skin barrier repair and gently fades surface pigmentation. Our guide on aloe vera benefits for face covers safe extraction.
Vitamin E capsule on scars. A drop of Vitamin E oil massaged into older scars at night for 2 to 3 minutes. Our guide on vitamin E capsule for face explains how to use it without clogging pores.
Honey and rosehip oil. A drop of rosehip oil with half a teaspoon honey on scars before bed. Rosehip has evidence supporting scar fading.
Turmeric and yoghurt paste. A pinch of turmeric in 1 tablespoon yoghurt as a weekly mask. The lactic acid in yoghurt is a mild AHA, and curcumin has anti-inflammatory properties.
Almond oil gentle massage. A few drops of cold-pressed sweet almond oil massaged into older scars for circulation support. Our guide on almond oil for face benefits covers the right type to use.
What Not to Use on Old Scars
These are widely recommended in Pakistani DIY circles, and all of them quietly damage healing skin.
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Lemon juice and lemon-honey masks. Despite being recommended on almost every Pakistani and Indian blog, lemon is acidic, damages the skin barrier, and triggers a sun reaction that leaves old scars darker. Our full guide on whether lemon for face is safe or not explains the science.
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Apple cider vinegar. Too acidic for facial scars and frequently causes chemical burns.
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Baking soda scrubs. Disrupt skin pH and inflame old pigmentation.
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Aggressive scrubbing. Damages the dermis and creates new pigmentation.
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Unregulated whitening creams. Steroids and mercury cause rebound darkening worse than the original scar.
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Toothpaste on pimples. Irritates and leaves more PIH behind.
When to See a Dermatologist
Some scars are beyond home care. See a dermatologist if your scars are deep and pitted, raised and growing, itching or painful, or not improving after 4 to 6 months of consistent treatment. Professional options include microneedling, chemical peels, laser resurfacing, subcision, steroid injections, and TCA cross for ice-pick scars.
These work far better than home remedies for true textural scars, especially when started early.
How to Prevent New Scars
Better than fading old ones is not making new ones. Key habits:
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Do not pick or squeeze pimples
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Treat acne early before it scars
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Wear SPF 50 daily on face, neck, and hands
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Eat antioxidant-rich foods. Our guide on foods for glowing skin covers what supports healing
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Use silicone gel as soon as a new wound has healed over
How Long Until You See Results
Honest timelines, because false promises waste effort:
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Surface dark spots (PIH): 2 to 6 months with consistent care
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Mild surface scars: 4 to 6 months
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Pitted scars: 6 to 12 months for partial improvement, professional treatment needed for major change
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Raised scars: 3 to 6 months with silicone gel
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Keloids: usually need professional treatment
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can old scars on the face be completely removed?
Dark marks (PIH) usually fade completely with consistent care. True textural scars rarely disappear fully without professional treatment like microneedling or laser, but they can become significantly less visible. Setting honest expectations protects you from costly disappointments.
2. What is the difference between a scar and a dark spot from acne?
A dark spot is flat pigmentation with normal skin texture, easily fadeable with Vitamin C and SPF. A real scar is a textural change you can feel. Most "old scars" on Pakistani faces are actually dark spots, which is good news because they respond well to home care.
3. Does Vitamin E really fade old scars on the face?
Vitamin E gradually softens older scars and supports skin healing, but the effect is slow and works best on raised or post-inflammatory scars. It does not erase pitted scars. Use a small amount only 2 to 3 nights a week to avoid clogging pores.
4. How long does it take to fade an old scar at home?
Most dark post-acne marks show meaningful change in 2 to 3 months and may fade completely by 6 months. Real textural scars take 6 to 12 months for partial improvement. Daily sunscreen is the single biggest factor in your timeline.
5. Can chicken pox scars on the face be faded naturally?
Recent chicken pox dark marks fade with consistent Vitamin C, niacinamide, and sunscreen over 3 to 6 months. Older pitted chicken pox scars rarely fade fully at home, so home care can soften the appearance, but laser or microneedling deliver real change. A dermatologist can confirm the best route.
Conclusion
The honest answer to how to fade old scars on face is patience and the right tools. Identify whether you are dealing with dark spots or true textural scars, choose the matching active ingredients, and stay consistent for 3 to 6 months. Avoid the lemon-and-baking-soda DIYs that quietly damage Pakistani skin.
At Herbsalot, we believe in honest skincare that respects how skin heals. Pair calm daily care with realistic expectations, and most old marks fade beautifully. The ones that do not are not failures of effort, they are signs that professional care is the next step. Either way, the skin you have been hiding can get there.


