🧴 Skin Type Quiz
Answer five quick questions about how your skin looks and feels and find out whether it's oily, dry, normal, or combination.
🔧 Discover Your Skin Type
Why knowing your skin type matters
Your skin type is the foundation of an effective routine. The right cleanser, moisturizer, and actives for oily skin can overwhelm dry skin, and vice versa. Identifying whether you're oily, dry, normal, or combination helps you pick textures and ingredients that balance your skin instead of fighting it.
This quiz reads the everyday signals — shine, tightness, pores, and flaking — and turns them into a clear starting point. Pair the result with our routine builder to assemble a morning and evening plan that fits.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How does the quiz determine my skin type?
It asks how your skin behaves through the day — how oily your T-zone gets, how tight it feels after washing, how visible your pores are, how much you shine by midday, and whether you flake. It tallies your answers and assigns the dominant pattern. An even split between oily and dry zones is classed as combination skin.
What's the difference between combination and oily skin?
Oily skin produces excess sebum more or less everywhere, looking shiny and feeling greasy across the face. Combination skin is oily in some areas — usually the T-zone of forehead, nose, and chin — while the cheeks stay normal or dry. Treating combination skin often means using lighter products on the T-zone and richer ones on the cheeks.
Can my skin type change over time?
Yes. Skin type shifts with age, hormones, climate, and the products you use. Many people get oilier in humid summers and drier in winter, and skin often becomes drier with age as oil production slows. It's worth re-checking your type seasonally and adjusting your routine rather than assuming it's fixed for life.
What if my skin is also sensitive?
Sensitivity is separate from oily, dry, normal, or combination — any type can also be sensitive, meaning it stings, reddens, or reacts easily. If you flag that here, the quiz notes it so you can favour fragrance-free, gentle formulas and patch-test new products. For persistent reactions, see a dermatologist.