Glass skin routine 2026: The 10-step Korean protocol dermatologists actually recommend
By Korearly Beauty Desk, K-beauty research team, sources verified by Seoul dermatology consultantsPublished 2026-04-24Last updated 2026-04-24
Glass skin routine 2026: The 10-step Korean protocol dermatologists actually recommend
Key numbers
The term 'glass skin' was popularized in English-language beauty media around 2017 and generated over 2.3 billion views on TikTok by end of 2024
The global K-beauty market reached $17.8 billion in 2024 and is projected to exceed $24 billion by 2028 (Grand View Research)
Korean women spend 2.4x more on skincare than American women ($185/month vs $77/month average — Statista 2024 consumer survey)
A 2023 clinical study showed 78% of participants achieved measurable skin brightness improvement after 8 weeks of consistent 10-step K-beauty routine (Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology)
Sunscreen non-compliance reduces K-beauty routine effectiveness by an estimated 60% (American Academy of Dermatology)
South Korea has the highest per-capita beauty clinic visit rate globally — 1 in 3 women visits a dermatology clinic at least quarterly (Korea Beauty Industry Report 2024)
Glass skin — the Korean term for luminous, poreless, translucent skin — became a global beauty goal around 2017 and has only grown since. But most viral routines skip the dermatological science that makes the result possible.
The real glass skin protocol is a layered hydration system that maximizes water retention while gradually thickening the skin barrier. It requires consistent execution over 4–8 weeks to show measurable change.
The 10 steps are not all daily. Some are twice-weekly (exfoliation), some are daily (moisture layers), and some are only for special occasions (sheet mask routines). Overdoing steps 3–5 daily can compromise the barrier.
Budget expectation: A complete routine with mid-tier Korean products costs $120–$200 USD initial investment, with ongoing monthly cost of $40–80. Premium versions can reach $400+ monthly.
Korearly earns no commission on products mentioned unless clearly labeled. Product names are chosen based on Seoul dermatology clinic usage records and global reviewer consensus as of 2026.
"Glass skin isn't about piling on products — it's about building a hydrated skin barrier that reflects light naturally. Most patients who chase glass skin actually need fewer products, not more."
Frequently asked questions
Do I really need all 10 steps?
No. Dermatologists recommend starting with a 5-step core (cleanser, toner, serum, moisturizer, SPF). Add remaining steps gradually over 4–8 weeks, giving your skin time to adjust. Daily 10-step routines work for some, but a simplified sustainable routine beats an elaborate unsustainable one.
Can men follow the glass skin routine?
Yes. The only adjustment is that male skin is typically thicker and oilier, so lighter moisturizers (gel vs cream) and more frequent exfoliation (2x weekly vs 1x) work better. All other steps apply identically.
Partially. Hydration, sleep, and diet (high omega-3, low sugar) can achieve maybe 40% of the glass skin effect. But without SPF and targeted actives, you cannot reach the luminosity level shown by K-pop idols and Korean models.
What's the difference between glass skin and dewy skin?
Glass skin: permanent-look poreless luminosity achieved through skincare routine. Dewy skin: temporary 'wet' shine achieved through makeup finishing. Idols often combine both.
Can I achieve glass skin without going to a dermatologist?
Yes for baseline glass skin. For the next-level luminosity seen on Korean celebrities, add quarterly dermatology visits — LDM ultrasound facial ($120–180) and skin boosters like Rejuran ($300–450) significantly amplify the at-home routine's effect.