The Retinoid Family: A Hierarchy of Strength
All retinoids are vitamin A derivatives. All of them work by binding to retinoic acid receptors in your skin cells and triggering changes in gene expression that increase cell turnover, stimulate collagen, unclog pores, and fade hyperpigmentation. But they do not all work equally — there's a clear hierarchy based on how directly each one activates those receptors.
| Retinoid | Relative Strength | Prescription? | Conversion Steps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retinyl palmitate | ~1x | No | 3 steps to retinoic acid |
| Retinol | ~6x | No | 2 steps to retinoic acid |
| Retinaldehyde | ~11x | No | 1 step to retinoic acid |
| Tretinoin (retinoic acid) | ~20x | Yes | Already active — no conversion |
| Tazarotene | ~50x | Yes | Already active |
Retinol: The OTC Option
Retinol is the most popular OTC retinoid. It needs to be converted by your skin enzymes twice before it becomes active retinoic acid — which means you need to use it consistently for 3–6 months before seeing results comparable to what tretinoin achieves in 8–12 weeks. That said, retinol causes significantly less irritation during the adjustment period and is appropriate for most people starting out with retinoids.
Best retinols: Paula's Choice 0.3% (beginner), The Ordinary 0.5% (intermediate), SkinCeuticals Retinol 0.5 (excellent formulation, great tolerability).
Tretinoin: The Gold Standard
Tretinoin (all-trans retinoic acid) is already in active form — it binds directly to retinoid receptors without conversion. This is why it works dramatically faster than retinol and why it causes more initial irritation (dryness, flaking, redness during the "retinoid purge" period of 4–8 weeks). The evidence base for tretinoin is unmatched:
- Proven to increase collagen production in multiple placebo-controlled studies
- Reduces fine lines and wrinkles measurably in 12–24 weeks
- The only topical treatment FDA-approved to treat photoaging (sun damage)
- Treats acne, reduces post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, improves skin texture
How to Get Tretinoin Without Insurance Hassles
Getting tretinoin through a traditional dermatologist can be a months-long wait and expensive without insurance. Telehealth services have changed this:
- Curology: Custom formula including tretinoin, prescribed after photo consultation. $30–$50/month, provider access included. One of the fastest ways to get started.
- Hers: Prescribes tretinoin as part of their skincare consultation service. Strong option for women wanting comprehensive skincare + other women's health services.
- Musely: Dermatologist-formulated custom prescriptions, often combining tretinoin with niacinamide, azelaic acid, or other actives. More customization than Curology.
→ Compare Prescription Skincare Services
Who Should Start with Retinol vs Tretinoin?
Start with retinol if: You're new to retinoids, have sensitive skin or rosacea, want to minimize irritation risk, or are under 30 with mild concerns. Build a 6-month retinol habit, then graduate to tretinoin.
Go straight to tretinoin if: You have significant acne, noticeable photoaging (dark spots, wrinkles from sun damage), or are 35+ and want the fastest evidence-backed results. The initial irritation is temporary (4–8 weeks) and worth it for most people.
The Retinoid Protocol for Best Results
Start 2–3 nights per week, applying a pea-sized amount to dry skin after cleansing. Moisturize over it (or sandwich it between two layers of moisturizer if your skin is very sensitive). After 4–6 weeks, increase to 5–7 nights per week. Always use SPF 30+ the next morning — retinoids increase photosensitivity. Avoid during pregnancy.