Short answer: you shouldn’t use baking soda for this—no matter how many “e’s” the headline adds.
🧪 What baking soda is
Sodium bicarbonate is a strong alkaline powder mainly used for baking and cleaning. Skin, however, is naturally slightly acidic.
When you apply it to your face, it can disrupt the skin barrier rather than improve it.
🚫 Why the claim is false
🟤 Dark spots
- Caused by excess pigment (melanin)
- Baking soda does not reduce pigmentation
- Can irritate skin → may actually worsen spots
🧓 Wrinkles
- Caused by collagen loss and sun damage
- No scrub or paste can reverse them
- Baking soda has no anti-aging effect
💤 Dark circles
- Often due to genetics, thin skin, allergies, or sleep
- Baking soda does not affect these causes
⚠️ Risks of using baking soda on your face
- redness and burning
- dryness and peeling
- damaged skin barrier
- increased sensitivity
- possible worsening of pigmentation
The under-eye area is especially delicate.
🧴 What actually works (evidence-based)
For dark spots:
- Niacinamide
- Azelaic acid
- daily sunscreen (most important)
For wrinkles:
- Retinol (gradual improvement)
- sun protection
- moisturizers with ceramides
For dark circles:
- adequate sleep
- allergy management
- gentle skincare depending on cause
🧭 Bottom line
There is no safe or effective way to use baking soda to remove dark spots, wrinkles, or dark circles. It’s more likely to irritate your skin than help it.
If you want, tell me your skin type and I can suggest a simple routine that actually works and is affordable.