If you’ve ever read a hyaluronic acid serum label and seen terms like “high molecular weight,” “low molecular weight,” or “hydrolyzed HA,” you’ve bumped into the single most important and least explained factor in how well these products work. Hyaluronic acid isn’t one fixed thing — it comes in a huge range of sizes, and the size decides how deep it can travel and what it does once it gets there. Understanding this turns a confusing ingredient list into a tool you can actually use.

Quick answer: Hyaluronic acid molecular weight refers to the size of the HA chains, measured in daltons (Da) or kilodaltons (kDa). Large, high-molecular-weight HA mostly stays on the surface, forming a hydrating film that smooths and plumps the top of your skin. Small, low-molecular-weight HA can penetrate deeper, with research showing forms below about 100 kDa pass into the skin and the smallest reach the dermis. Neither size is simply “better” — they do different jobs, which is why the best serums often blend several weights. For the bigger picture on what HA does, start with our guide to the health benefits of hyaluronic acid.
What “molecular weight” actually means here
Hyaluronic acid is a long chain made of repeating sugar units. How many units are strung together determines the chain’s size, and that size is expressed as molecular weight — usually in daltons (Da) or thousands of daltons (kDa). A few rough reference points:
- High molecular weight (HMW): roughly 1,000 kDa and up. Big, sprawling molecules.
- Low molecular weight (LMW): roughly 50–300 kDa. Much smaller chains.
- Oligo / ultra-low / hydrolyzed HA: below ~50 kDa, down to tiny fragments.
The natural HA in your body spans a wide range too, and your skin uses different sizes for different signals. So when a product specifies a weight, it’s telling you something real about where the HA will go and how it’ll behave.
Why size changes everything
Your skin’s outer layer is a deliberate barrier — its whole job is to keep things out. Molecule size is one of the main things that determines whether something can cross it.
High-molecular-weight HA is too big to get through. Instead, it spreads across the surface and holds water there, creating a smooth, hydrated film. That film softens the look of fine lines, gives an instant plumping effect, and helps support the skin’s outer barrier. It’s excellent at surface hydration — it just doesn’t sink in. This surface-level smoothing and barrier support is a big part of why HA is such a staple in moisturizers and serums.1
Low-molecular-weight HA is small enough to penetrate. A 2025 review of HA in topical products found that HA below roughly 100 kDa can penetrate the skin, and the lowest weights are able to reach the deeper dermal layer.2 Getting deeper means LMW HA can hydrate below the surface and may interact more directly with skin cells, which is why it’s prized for a longer-lasting, “from within” feel rather than a purely topical film. In one clinical study, a serum built around low-molecular-weight HA measurably boosted skin moisture for several hours after application.3
This penetration difference is exactly why a serum’s molecular weight isn’t marketing fluff — it genuinely changes the outcome.

High vs low molecular weight at a glance
| High molecular weight | Low molecular weight | |
|---|---|---|
| Size | ~1,000 kDa and up | ~50–300 kDa (and smaller) |
| Penetration | Stays on the surface | Penetrates; smallest reach the dermis |
| Main effect | Surface film, instant plumping, barrier support | Deeper hydration, longer-lasting feel |
| Best for | Smoothing, immediate glow | Sustained hydration below the surface |
Is smaller always better? Not exactly
It’s tempting to assume the deepest-penetrating HA wins, but that’s not how it works, for two reasons.
First, the two sizes do different jobs, and you usually want both: a surface film that smooths and protects, plus deeper hydration that lasts. That’s the whole logic behind multi-weight serums.
Second, there’s an interesting wrinkle in the biology. Very small HA fragments don’t just hydrate — in some contexts they can act as a signal your body associates with damage and inflammation, whereas large HA tends to be calming. This is an active area of research and not a reason to avoid LMW HA in well-formulated skincare, but it’s a good argument against assuming “smallest equals best.” Size isn’t a simple dial where lower is always more.
What this means when you’re buying a serum
You don’t need a chemistry degree at the shelf. A few practical rules:
- Look for a blend. Phrases like “multiple molecular weights,” “cross-linked and free HA,” or a list that includes both sodium hyaluronate (typically smaller) and hyaluronic acid (often larger) suggest a product covering both surface and deeper hydration. This combination tends to outperform a single size.
- “Hydrolyzed hyaluronic acid” means the chains have been broken down to low weights for better penetration — useful, but ideally alongside larger HA, not instead of it.
- Sodium hyaluronate is the salt form of HA. It’s a touch smaller and more stable than pure HA, which is why you see it so often. It’s not a downgrade.
- Don’t over-index on the number. Formulation quality, concentration, and the rest of your routine matter at least as much as the exact kDa printed on the box.
A reminder that applies to every weight: HA pulls in water, so use it on damp skin and lock it in with a moisturizer. We get into the broader serum-versus-supplement question in topical vs oral hyaluronic acid.
Suggested read: 7 Proven Health Benefits of Hyaluronic Acid
Molecular weight and your skin barrier
There’s a nice link between HA size and your skin’s protective outer layer. High-molecular-weight HA’s surface film supports that barrier by holding moisture where it’s needed, which complements other barrier-friendly ingredients like ceramides and niacinamide. If your barrier is already compromised — tight, flaky, or reactive skin — a hydrating HA layer plus barrier repair ingredients is a sensible pairing. Our guide to the skin barrier covers how that protective layer works and how to keep it intact.
The bottom line
Hyaluronic acid’s molecular weight is the quiet variable that decides where it goes and what it does. Big, high-weight HA stays on top and delivers instant surface hydration and plumping; small, low-weight HA penetrates deeper — below about 100 kDa it gets into the skin, and the smallest forms reach the dermis — for a more sustained effect. Neither is universally better, and very small fragments behave differently enough that “smallest wins” is a myth.
The practical takeaway is simple: favor serums that combine multiple weights, apply HA to damp skin, and seal it in. That gives you the surface smoothing of large HA and the deeper hydration of small HA at once — which is exactly what your skin uses HA for in the first place.
Bukhari SNA, Roswandi NL, Waqas M, et al. Hyaluronic acid, a promising skin rejuvenating biomedicine: A review of recent updates and pre-clinical and clinical investigations on cosmetic and nutricosmetic effects. Int J Biol Macromol. 2018;120(Pt B):1682-1695. PubMed ↩︎
Zanchetta C, Scandolera A, Reynaud R. Hyaluronic Acid in Topical Applications: The Various Forms and Biological Effects of a Hero Molecule in the Cosmetics Industry. Biomolecules. 2025;15(12):1656. PubMed ↩︎
Garre A, Narda M, Valderas-Martinez P, Piquero J, Granger C. Antiaging effects of a novel facial serum containing L-Ascorbic acid, proteoglycans, and proteoglycan-stimulating tripeptide: ex vivo skin explant studies and in vivo clinical studies in women. Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol. 2018;11:253-263. PubMed ↩︎





