Women's Health

How To Support Your Skin During Weight Loss

A dermatologist shares the routine tweaks that can help target and prevent common concerns like sagging skin.

By Elliot O·Jun 1, 2026·1 min read
How To Support Your Skin During Weight Loss

Reported by Women's Health Magazine.

Weight loss changes more than your dress size. According to Women's Health Magazine, board-certified dermatologist Dr. Luke Maxfield says that rapid weight loss — whether driven by GLP-1 medications or other methods — can visibly age the skin in ways most people aren't prepared for. We're talking sagging, dullness, uneven tone, and a sudden uptick in fine lines. The culprit? A breakdown of collagen and elastin, the structural proteins that keep skin looking firm and resilient. Lose fat quickly, and you're not just reshaping your body — you're destabilizing your skin's foundation.

The Ingredients Worth Knowing

Dr. Maxfield's prescription for skin in recovery is built around three workhorses: hyaluronic acid, vitamin C, and retinol. Hyaluronic acid pulls moisture back into the skin, restoring that lit-from-within bounce that rapid weight loss tends to strip away. Vitamin C pulls double duty — it brightens and acts as an antioxidant shield against free-radical damage that degrades collagen. Retinol goes deeper, actively stimulating new collagen production while smoothing texture and fading uneven tone. These aren't trends. They're the gold standard.

For patients navigating post-weight-loss skin changes, Dr. Maxfield recommends L'Oréal Paris Revitalift Triple Power Moisturizer because it delivers all three in one step. It swaps traditional retinol for pro-retinol, a gentler retinoid that supports collagen without the irritation that can come with full-strength formulas — a meaningful distinction when your skin is already under stress. In a consumer study, 75% of GLP-1 users reported firmer-looking skin after just one month of use.

The broader takeaway here isn't brand loyalty — it's that your skin deserves the same intentionality you're bringing to every other part of your wellness journey. If your routine is still the same one you had two years ago, it might be time to catch it up.


Read the original at Women's Health Magazine.

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Women's HealthWomen's Health MagazineHealth & Fitness

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