3 simple steps to lose weight as fast as possible. Read now

Vitamin C Serum: Benefits and How to Use It

Vitamin C serum brightens skin, fights aging, and boosts sun protection. What it does, how to use it, which form to pick, and how to keep it from going bad.

Evidence-based
This article is based on scientific evidence, written by experts, and fact-checked by experts.
We look at both sides of the argument and strive to be objective, unbiased, and honest.
Vitamin C Serum: Benefits & How to Use It
Last updated on July 5, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on July 5, 2026.

Vitamin C serum is one of the few skincare products that both dermatologists and skincare obsessives agree on. It brightens dull skin, fades dark spots, softens the signs of aging, and — used in the morning under sunscreen — helps defend your skin against daily sun damage. The catch is that vitamin C is famously finicky: buy the wrong form or store it badly and you’re rubbing an oxidized, useless (or irritating) liquid on your face. Here’s how to get it right.

Vitamin C Serum: Benefits & How to Use It

Quick answer: A vitamin C serum delivers topical antioxidant protection while brightening skin and supporting collagen. Vitamin C neutralizes the free radicals from UV and pollution, boosts collagen production, and blocks excess pigment, which is why it’s prized for anti-aging, sun defense, and an even, glowing tone.1 Use it in the morning after cleansing and before sunscreen. The most potent form is L-ascorbic acid (look for around 10–20%), but it’s unstable — if your serum turns dark yellow or brown, it’s oxidized and should be replaced. Gentler derivatives suit sensitive skin. Pair it with daily SPF for the biggest payoff.

What vitamin C does for your skin

Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is naturally present in healthy skin in high concentrations, where it does real work, and topping it up topically taps into several of those functions at once.2 The three big ones:

Want healthier skin and hair?

Glow starts with what you eat. Choose your goal and get your plan.

Powered by DietGenie

The honest caveat worth stating up front: while the mechanisms are well established, the number of high-quality clinical trials on finished serums is still limited, and results depend heavily on the formulation being stable and able to penetrate.1 In other words, it’s a genuinely good ingredient, but the product quality matters a lot.

Glycolic Acid: Benefits, Uses & How to Start
Suggested read: Glycolic Acid: Benefits, Uses & How to Start

How to use a vitamin C serum

Vitamin C is a morning ingredient. Here’s the routine:

  1. Cleanse, then apply a few drops of serum to clean, dry skin.
  2. Let it absorb, then follow with moisturizer.
  3. Finish with sunscreen — this is the pairing that matters most, since vitamin C and SPF protect against sun damage through different mechanisms. Our guide to mineral vs chemical sunscreen helps you pick one.

A few pointers:

Choosing a form (and keeping it fresh)

This is where most vitamin C purchases succeed or fail.

FormNotes
L-ascorbic acidMost potent and best-studied, but least stable; look for ~10–20%
Sodium ascorbyl phosphateGentler, more stable derivative; good for sensitive/acne-prone skin
Magnesium ascorbyl phosphateStable, hydrating, gentle
Ascorbyl glucoside / THD ascorbateStable derivatives, milder but often less potent

The Achilles’ heel of L-ascorbic acid is instability — it oxidizes when exposed to air, light, and heat, and once oxidized it stops working and can even irritate. Protect it by:

What results to expect, and when

Vitamin C is a slow, cumulative ingredient, not a quick fix. The antioxidant, sun-defense benefit is working from day one even though you can’t see it — that’s the point of it. The visible changes take time: a brighter, more even tone tends to show up within four to eight weeks, while fading dark spots and any firming benefit build over three months or more of daily use. Because so much of the payoff is invisible protection, the temptation is to give up before the visible brightening kicks in. Stick with it, use it every morning, and judge it after a couple of months rather than a couple of weeks.

Common vitamin C mistakes

A few avoidable errors are why some people conclude vitamin C “doesn’t work”:

Side effects and who should be careful

Vitamin C serum is well tolerated by most people, but:

None of this should scare you off — it’s one of the most rewarding actives out there — but it does reward buying a well-formulated product and treating it right.

Suggested read: AHA vs BHA: Which Exfoliating Acid Is Right?

The bottom line

Vitamin C serum earns its place as a morning staple: it’s a powerful antioxidant that defends against daily sun and pollution damage, supports collagen for firmer skin, and brightens dark spots and dullness for a more even tone. The keys to actually getting those benefits are picking a stable, well-packaged product — potent L-ascorbic acid or a gentler derivative for sensitive skin — using it each morning under sunscreen, and replacing it the moment it turns brown. Get the product and the storage right, pair it with daily SPF, and vitamin C is one of the highest-return steps you can add to a skincare routine.

Want healthier skin and hair?
Take a free 3-minute quiz and get a weekly plan with recipes and a shopping list.
🍳 Breakfast 420 kcal
🥗 Lunch 560 kcal
🍲 Dinner 610 kcal
🔒 Snacks, recipes & shopping list
Get my meal plan
Free quiz · Takes about 3 minutes · Powered by DietGenie

  1. Al-Niaimi F, Chiang NYZ. Topical vitamin C and the skin: mechanisms of action and clinical applications. J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2017;10(7):14-17. PubMed ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎

  2. Pullar JM, Carr AC, Vissers MCM. The roles of vitamin C in skin health. Nutrients. 2017;9(8):866. PubMed ↩︎

Share this article: Facebook Pinterest WhatsApp Twitter / X Email
Share

More articles you might like

People who are reading “Vitamin C Serum: Benefits & How to Use It” also love these articles:

Topics

Browse all articles