Myrtle Beach is one of the sunniest places on the East Coast. That is part of why people move here and why tourism never really stops.
It is also why photodamage is one of the top concerns we see in our practice. Sun spots, uneven tone, diffuse redness, and rough texture are not signs of bad skin care.
They are signs of an active, outdoor life in a place with a UV index that climbs to double digits in summer. The good news is that IPL photofacial and chemical peels both address sun damage effectively.
The question is which one fits your specific situation.
How IPL Treats Sun Damage
Intense pulsed light (IPL) uses broad-spectrum light energy filtered to target specific chromophores in the skin: melanin in pigmented spots and oxyhemoglobin in redness and broken capillaries. The light energy is selectively absorbed by those targets and converted to heat, which destroys the unwanted pigment or vascular structure without damaging surrounding tissue.
Negishi and colleagues published clinical outcomes in Lasers in Surgery and Medicine demonstrating that IPL produces significant improvement in solar lentigines (sun spots), dyschromia, and vascular redness after a series of treatments. The photopigmented cells fragment and rise to the surface as the skin heals, appearing darker and flaking away over 7 to 14 days before the skin reveals the clearer tone underneath.
IPL is a surface-to-mid-dermis treatment. It excels at precision targeting of visible spots and redness, but it does not address the texture and roughness that often accompanies sun damage.
How Chemical Peels Treat Sun Damage
Chemical peels work differently. Rather than targeting specific chromophores, they accelerate cell turnover across the entire treatment area.
A peel removes damaged, photodegraded cells from the outer layers of skin and stimulates the dermis to produce new collagen. The result is fresher, more evenly toned, and smoother skin from the ground up.
Different peel strengths address different depths of damage:
- Light peels (glycolic acid, salicylic acid, lactic acid): target the outermost epidermal layers, zero downtime to mild flaking, great for mild discoloration and early photodamage.
- Medium peels (TCA 15 to 35%): penetrate to the papillary dermis, 5 to 7 days of visible peeling, meaningfully address moderate sun damage, uneven texture, and fine lines.
- Deep peels (high-strength TCA, phenol): reserved for significant photodamage and deeper wrinkles, require longer recovery.
Rendon and colleagues, writing in the Journal of Clinical and Aesthetic Dermatology, summarized the evidence supporting chemical peels as a well-established approach to photodamage, melasma, and pigmentary disorders across all peel depths.
The Key Differences at a Glance
| Factor | IPL Photofacial | Chemical Peel |
|---|---|---|
| Primary target | Specific spots and vessels | Overall surface layer and tone |
| Best for | Defined sun spots, diffuse redness | Uneven texture, widespread dullness, mild fine lines |
| Downtime | Mild redness 24–48 hours, darkening/flaking of spots over 7–14 days | Light: minimal. Medium: 5–7 days of visible peeling |
| Skin type consideration | Most effective on lighter skin tones; caution in darker skin | Adjustable for most skin types with peel selection |
| Sessions | 3–5 for full series | Can be done as a single treatment or series |
Skin Type Matters Significantly for IPL
This is an important distinction. IPL targets melanin, so it works most effectively and most safely on lighter skin tones (Fitzpatrick types I through III).
In skin with more melanin, IPL carries a higher risk of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation because the device cannot easily distinguish between the pigment in a sun spot and the pigment in the surrounding healthy skin. Chemical peels, when chosen correctly for the skin type, work across a broader range of tones and can be adjusted accordingly.
If you have a medium or olive complexion and are concerned about sun spots, a consultation is especially important to determine the right approach. BBL Hero, which uses a different filtering approach than traditional IPL, may be a safer and more effective option for certain skin types as well.
The Case for Doing Both
For many patients dealing with significant sun damage, the most effective approach is a combination. IPL clears the specific pigmented spots and vascular redness with precision.
A medium-depth peel follows, addressing the underlying texture, stimulating new collagen, and lifting the general dullness that IPL does not target as well. Sequenced correctly, typically IPL first followed by a peel 4 to 6 weeks later, the two treatments address complementary aspects of photodamage for a comprehensive result.
A HydraFacial is also an excellent addition at either the beginning or end of a photodamage treatment plan to hydrate, extract, and smooth while other treatments do their deeper work.
Not sure which treatment fits your skin? Bring your sun damage concerns to our Myrtle Beach team. We will look at your skin, your complexion, and your goals and recommend the most effective path forward.
Book a ConsultationReferences
- Negishi K, et al. Full-face photorejuvenation of photodamaged skin by intense pulsed light with integrated contact cooling. Lasers Surg Med. 2002;30(4):298-305.
- Rendon MI, et al. Evidence and considerations in the application of chemical peels in skin disorders and aesthetic resurfacing. J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2010;3(7):32-43.
- Fitzpatrick TB. The validity and practicality of sun-reactive skin types I through VI. Arch Dermatol. 1988;124(6):869-871.