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Skincare Protocols | July

QUICK TAKE: CLEANSING IS THE FOUNDATION OF AN EFFECTIVE SKINCARE ROUTINE

  • Cleansing is the foundation of an effective skincare routine, but how you cleanse matters as much as what you cleanse with.
  • Done well, it removes oil, makeup, sunscreen, and environmental debris while supporting the skin's barrier and prepping it for everything that follows.
  • The protocol is simple: clean hands, lukewarm water, the right amount of cleanser, gentle circular massage, a thorough rinse, a soft pat dry, and a complete follow-up routine.
  • Small habits make a big difference: double cleansing when you're wearing heavy makeup or water-resistant sunscreen, switching between an active and a gentle cleanser if your skin is dry or sensitive, and cleansing twice a day rather than once.
  • Common mistakes, harsh formulas, tugging, skipping the morning wash, over-cleansing, quietly undermine the rest of your regimen.
  • The right technique, paired with the right cleanser, sets up healthy, resilient skin and lets the products that follow do their job.

How to Use a Facial Cleanser Correctly in Your Daily Skincare Routine

By ZO® Skin Health

Cleansing is the part of skincare that gets the least attention and carries the most weight. Almost every other product in your routine – serums, moisturizers, treatments – is built on the assumption that the skin underneath is clean, balanced, and ready to absorb. When cleansing goes well, you don’t notice it. When it goes badly, you feel it everywhere else.

The good news is that cleansing well isn’t complicated. It comes down to choosing a formula that suits your skin, using the right technique, and avoiding a handful of small habits that quietly work against you.

 

Why Is Proper Cleansing Important in Skincare?

Proper cleansing keeps skin balanced, healthy, and ready for the products that follow. As the first step in Getting Skin Ready®, it does three things at once.

1. Removal of Oil, Makeup, and Debris

Skin accumulates a lot over the course of a day: sweat, oil, environmental pollutants, and particulate matter from the air. Add makeup and sunscreen on top, and you have layers of buildup that can clog pores and trigger breakouts if they aren’t properly removed at night. A well-formulated cleanser lifts these impurities away without disrupting the skin’s protective barrier.

2. Prepping Skin for Correcting Products

Clean skin is receptive skin. When the surface is free of residue, the active ingredients in serums and treatments can actually reach the depth where they’re meant to work. Skip or shortchange the cleansing step, and even the most thoughtful routine ends up performing at a reduced capacity.

3. Maintaining Healthy, Balanced Skin

Regular cleansing supports skin health by easing pore congestion, reducing breakouts, and clearing the dullness that comes with daily buildup. The right cleanser also helps maintain barrier function and skin comfort, which is what keeps your skin calm and resilient over time.

How to Use a Facial Cleanser: A Step-by-Step Walkthrough

The basics matter more than people realize. Here’s how to work through them properly.

Step 1: Start with Clean Hands

Always begin with clean hands. Otherwise, you’re transferring bacteria and debris from your day onto the face you’re about to wash, which defeats the point.

Step 2: Wet Your Face with Lukewarm Water

Extreme temperatures, too hot or too cold, irritate and dehydrate the skin. Lukewarm water loosens impurities while keeping the skin comfortable.

Step 3: Dispense an Adequate Amount of Cleanser

A pea-sized amount is usually enough in the morning. Evenings typically call for more to handle makeup, sunscreen, and the day’s buildup, unless you’re double cleansing (more on that below).

Step 4: Massage Gently Into Skin

Work the cleanser in using gentle, circular motions. Spend a little extra time on areas that tend to accumulate more oil: the T-zone, meaning forehead, nose, and chin.

Step 5: Rinse Thoroughly

Rinse with lukewarm water until no cleanser is left behind. Pay attention to the easy-to-miss areas: the hairline, the jaw, the neck. Residue left in those spots is a common cause of unexplained congestion.

Step 6: Pat Your Face Dry

Use a clean, soft towel and gently pat: don’t rub. Aggressive drying causes micro-irritation, which sensitive or post-procedure skin in particular can’t afford.

Step 7: Follow with a Complete Routine

Cleansing is the prep step, not the whole routine. Follow it with products designed to get skin ready, prevent + correct, and protect. That’s where the rest of the work happens.

Getting Skin Ready®

An effective routine starts before any treatment product touches your skin. ZO’s protocol, cleanse→exfoliate→tone, primes the skin by removing surface oil, debris, and dead cells that would otherwise limit absorption.

Applying serums and treatments to properly prepped skin is how active ingredients reach the depth where they can actually work.

Tips for Maximizing the Effectiveness of Your Facial Cleanser

A few small adjustments can take a routine from adequate to genuinely effective.

Double Cleanse When Necessary

If you’re wearing heavy makeup or water-resistant sunscreen, a single cleanse often won’t cut it. Use a cleansing oil first to break down makeup and oil-soluble debris, then follow with a gel cleanser to lift away whatever’s left. The two-step approach is what makes the difference on heavier wear days.

Buff Debris Away

If you want an extra boost on a day when skin feels especially congested, a washcloth or a gentle cleansing brush can help lightly buff away debris while you cleanse. Work in small circular motions, then rinse thoroughly.

Quick tip: Skip the cleansing brush if your skin is sensitive, reactive, or prone to redness: mechanical exfoliation can compound irritation rather than ease it. If you’re unsure whether it’s right for your skin, a consultation with a dermatologist is the simplest way to find out.

Consider Different Cleansers for AM vs PM

If your skin is dry or sensitive, especially if one of your cleansers contains AHAs, BHAs, or other active ingredients, it’s often wise to limit that cleanser to once daily. A gentler formula can do the work at the other end of the day, cleansing the skin without compounding dryness or irritation.

Cleanse Twice a Day

Morning cleansing clears the excess oil, sweat, and dead skin cells that accumulate overnight. Evening cleansing removes makeup, sunscreen, and the buildup of debris and pollutants from the day. Skip either one, and the rest of your routine has to work harder than it should.

Common Mistakes to Avoid When Using a Facial Cleanser

Most cleansing missteps are small, repeated habits that quietly add up. Here are the ones worth catching early.

Using Harsh Formulas

Modern cleansers are designed to clean without stripping, but formulas heavy on alcohol or strong fragrance can still irritate and dry the skin, especially if it’s sensitive to begin with. Gritty, abrasive scrubs are also worth avoiding; they tend to disrupt the skin barrier more than they help.

A quick note: If you're not sure whether a cleanser is too harsh for your skin, or you've had reactions in the past, it's worth getting a professional opinion before changing your routine. A consultation with a dermatologist can help you identify the ingredients your skin actually reacts to, rather than guessing.

Skipping Morning Face Wash

Overnight, the skin accumulates sweat, oil, and dead skin cells, all of which can contribute to congestion and dullness. That overnight buildup also gets in the way of your morning skincare absorbing properly. A morning cleanse clears the slate and lets the rest of your routine land where it should.

Tugging at Skin

Vigorous rubbing during cleansing puts unnecessary stress on the skin, particularly around the eyes, where the tissue is thinner and more delicate. If mascara is being stubborn, reach for a dedicated eye makeup remover or use a double-cleansing approach instead of scrubbing harder.

Over-Cleansing

More cleansing isn’t better cleansing. Washing too often disrupts the skin’s protective barrier and leaves it feeling stripped and reactive. Twice a day is the right rhythm for most people, unless a dermatologist has told you otherwise.

Why Proper Cleansing Matters

Washing your face looks straightforward, and in some ways it is. But the small choices, the water temperature, the amount of pressure, the amount of cleanser, the formula itself, add up to something that either supports your skin or quietly works against it.

A cleanser matched to your skin type, used with care, removes the day without taking anything else with it. It leaves skin comfortable rather than tight, balanced rather than stripped, and ready for the rest of your routine to do what it was designed to do. That’s the foundation. The outcomes of all other steps depend on how strong the foundation is.

FAQs About Facial Cleansers

Twice daily, once in the morning and once at night, is the right rhythm for most people. Morning cleansing clears the oil and sweat that accumulate overnight; evening cleansing removes makeup, sunscreen, and the day's pollutants. If your dermatologist has advised otherwise, follow their guidance.

Yes, provided the cleanser is gently formulated and free of ingredients that can sting or irritate. The skin around the eyes is thinner and more delicate than the rest of the face, so harsher formulas, anything heavy on fragrance, alcohol, or active acids, are best kept away from the eye area. If you need extra help removing eye makeup, consider double cleansing or using micellar water as a first step.

Absolutely. Research shows that proper cleansing is crucial for managing acne and other problematic skin conditions. A well-matched cleanser helps clear excess oil, debris, and bacteria that contribute to breakouts, while supporting the skin barrier so other treatments can do their job. For acne-prone skin specifically, gel or foaming cleansers with ingredients like salicylic acid often work best.

The right facial cleanser depends on your skin type. Gel and foaming cleansers suit oily and acne-prone skin, while cream cleansers and gentle emulsions work better for dry, sensitive, or post-treatment skin. Combination skin needs a balanced formula that handles oil without drying out the cheeks. Across all skin types, look for fragrance-free options and avoid harsh alcohols.

For a full breakdown, refer to our dedicated guide on choosing the right cleanser for your skin type.

Not for everyone. But it’s genuinely helpful for anyone wearing heavy makeup, such as waterproof mascara or long-wear foundation, or water-resistant sunscreen, where a single cleanse often isn’t enough to fully break things down.

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