By Olympia Morris, PA-C · Medically reviewed by Oliver Morris, DO, Medical Director
If you’ve noticed brown or gray-brown patches creeping across your cheeks, forehead, upper lip, or the bridge of your nose, and they seem to fade in winter and flare every summer, you’re likely dealing with melasma. It’s one of the most common pigment problems we see, and one of the most misunderstood. Patients often arrive frustrated, having tried a drawer full of products or a laser somewhere else that made things worse.
Here’s the honest version. Melasma is manageable, but it’s stubborn, and it responds to patience far better than to aggression. At Olympia Aesthetics & Wellness in Palm Harbor, we treat it as a long game, with medical oversight and a plan built to protect your skin rather than provoke it.
What Melasma Actually Is
Melasma is a form of hyperpigmentation. Certain cells in your skin, called melanocytes, become overactive and pump out more pigment than they should in specific areas. That extra pigment settles into flat, symmetrical patches, usually on the face, usually in a mirror-image pattern on both cheeks.
It isn’t dangerous, and it isn’t a sign of anything sinister. But it’s cosmetically frustrating because it’s chronic and because it likes to come back. The pigment can sit near the surface of the skin, deeper in the dermis, or both, and where it sits partly determines how it responds to treatment.
Who Gets Melasma
Melasma shows up most often in women, particularly those with medium to darker skin tones, though it can affect anyone. A few patterns come up again and again in our Palm Harbor and Clearwater patients:
- Pregnancy. Melasma during pregnancy is so common it has a nickname, the “mask of pregnancy.”
- Hormonal shifts. Birth control pills, hormone therapy, and the hormonal swings of perimenopause can all trigger or worsen it.
- Sun exposure. Living in Florida means year-round UV, which is a constant provocation.
- Genetics. If your mother or sister has it, your odds go up.
What Triggers It, and Why Florida Makes It Harder
Three forces drive melasma: hormones, sunlight, and heat. Understanding all three is the key to controlling it.
Hormones set the stage. Estrogen and progesterone appear to sensitize melanocytes so they respond more aggressively to other triggers, which is why pregnancy, the pill, and hormone therapy so often bring it on. Research reviewing melasma pathogenesis points to female sex hormones, UV exposure, and inflammation as the core triggering factors, layered on top of a genetic predisposition.
Sunlight is the daily accelerant. It isn’t only the UV rays. Visible light, especially the high-energy blue light that comes off the sun and screens, drives melasma too, and the pigment it creates tends to be more intense and longer lasting. That’s a big deal in a state where the sun is relentless.
Heat is the trigger people forget. Warmth alone can stimulate the pigment-producing machinery in the skin, which is why a Florida summer, a hot yoga class, or even standing over a stove can set melasma off. Between the sun and the heat, Central Florida is close to a worst-case environment for this condition, and that reality shapes how we treat it.
Why Melasma Is So Stubborn
Melasma isn’t a stain you scrub off. It’s a signal from cells that are primed to overreact. Even after you clear the visible patches, those melanocytes stay ready to fire again the moment they see sun, heat, or a hormonal nudge. That’s why melasma comes back, and why anyone promising a permanent cure is overselling.
The right mental model is management, not eradication. Think of it more like blood pressure than a broken bone. You control it with a consistent routine, and you keep controlling it.
The Careful, Layered Way We Treat It
This is where an expert provider-led practice matters most. Melasma is one of the few skin conditions where the wrong device, or the right device at the wrong setting, can leave you worse off than when you started. Our approach is deliberately conservative and built in layers, with treatment decisions made under the medical oversight of Oliver Morris, DO, Medical Director.
Sun and heat protection come first. No treatment holds if your skin keeps getting provoked. We’ll get you on a broad-spectrum mineral sunscreen that also blocks visible light, ideally a tinted formula with iron oxide, since tinted sunscreens shield against the high-energy visible light that plain sunscreens miss. Reapplication, hats, and shade aren’t optional extras here, they’re the foundation.
Topicals do the heavy lifting. Under supervision, we use pigment-calming ingredients such as tranexamic acid, azelaic acid, and prescription-strength hydroquinone, often rotated or combined to avoid irritation. A meta-analysis of randomized trials found tranexamic acid meaningfully reduces melasma severity across oral, injected, and topical forms, which is why it’s become a mainstay. Hydroquinone remains effective but needs a physician guiding how long and how often you use it, because overuse carries its own risks.
Gentle in-office treatments, chosen carefully. Superficial chemical peels can help lift surface pigment when the skin is ready for them. We build up slowly and watch how your skin responds rather than pushing for a dramatic single result.
Devices, only when appropriate and always conservative. If a light or laser-based treatment makes sense, we use low energy settings and prime the skin first. This caution is the whole point, and it’s backed by the literature.
What to Avoid
A warning worth taking seriously. Aggressive lasers and high-energy IPL can make melasma worse. Reviews of laser treatment for melasma document rebound hyperpigmentation, recurrence, and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, especially in medium and darker skin tones, when devices are too strong or the skin isn’t prepped. Heat and inflammation are exactly what melasma feeds on, so a powerful device can pour fuel on the fire. If a provider wants to blast your melasma with a strong laser in a single session, that’s your cue to slow down and get a second opinion. The safest path is low and slow, under medical supervision.
Realistic Expectations
Let’s be straight about what good treatment looks like. You should expect gradual, meaningful fading over weeks to months, not overnight clearing. You should expect to keep a maintenance routine going, because stopping usually invites the pigment back. And you should expect some seasonal fluctuation, with Florida summers being the hardest stretch.
Managed well, melasma can become faint enough that it stops bothering you day to day. That’s a realistic and worthwhile goal. A permanent, one-and-done cure is not.
Maintenance: The Part That Keeps You Ahead
The patients who do best treat melasma as an ongoing habit. Daily sunscreen with visible-light protection, reapplied. A maintenance topical your provider adjusts over time. Sensible heat avoidance when you can manage it. Periodic check-ins so we can adjust before a flare gets ahead of you. It’s not glamorous, but it works, and it beats chasing flare after flare.
Learn More and Book a Visit
Melasma sits within a larger family of pigment and sun-damage concerns. For the bigger picture, see our overview of pigmentation and sun damage, and if you’re trying to tell melasma apart from freckles or age spots, our guide to sun spots and age spots helps.
When you’re ready, the next step is a proper skin assessment so we can map your pigment and build a plan that fits your skin and your life. You can review treatment options and costs on our pricing page, read about our conservative approach to chemical peels and medical facials, or see how we serve patients across the area from our Palm Harbor med spa and Clearwater locations. Prefer to start from home? We offer complimentary virtual consultations.
Book your consultation and let’s get your melasma under control the careful way.
Aesthetic procedures at Olympia are performed by Olympia Morris, PA-C, with medical oversight by Oliver Morris, DO, Medical Director.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can melasma be cured completely?
Not permanently, and any provider who promises a cure is overselling. The pigment-producing cells stay primed to react, so melasma is controlled rather than cured. With a consistent plan, we can fade it substantially and keep it faint.
Why did a laser make my melasma worse?
Melasma is provoked by heat and inflammation, which is exactly what aggressive lasers and high-energy IPL create. Published reviews document rebound and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation after strong laser treatment, especially in medium and darker skin. Recovery is possible, but it starts with stopping the aggressive treatment and switching to a gentle, layered plan.
Does sunscreen really matter that much for melasma?
Yes, more than almost anything else. Both UV and visible light drive melasma, so a broad-spectrum mineral sunscreen that also blocks visible light, ideally tinted with iron oxide, is the single most important thing you can do. Without it, treatments simply don’t hold.
Is tranexamic acid safe for treating melasma?
Tranexamic acid has become a well-supported option, and a meta-analysis of randomized trials found it reduces melasma severity in oral, injected, and topical forms. It should be used under a physician’s guidance, since the oral form in particular has considerations we screen for before recommending it.
Will my melasma come back after pregnancy?
Often it fades on its own in the months after delivery as hormones settle, but not always, and sun exposure can keep it going. Starting sun protection early and checking in with us gives you the best chance of clearing it and keeping it away.
How long before I see results?
Plan on weeks to months, not days. Melasma responds to steady, gentle treatment, and pushing for fast results is what tends to backfire. Most patients notice gradual fading over several months with a consistent routine.
References
- Kwon SH, et al. Recent progress in melasma pathogenesis. Pigment Cell Melanoma Res. 2015. PMID: 26230865. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26230865/
- Lyons AB, et al. Melasma: The need for tailored photoprotection to improve clinical outcomes. Photodermatol Photoimmunol Photomed. 2022;38(6):515-521. PMID: 35229368. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35229368/
- Tranexamic acid as a therapeutic option for melasma management: meta-analysis and systematic review of randomized controlled trials. J Dermatolog Treat. 2024. PMID: 38843906. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38843906/
- Arora P, Sarkar R, Garg VK, Arya L. Lasers for treatment of melasma and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. J Cutan Aesthet Surg. 2012. PMID: 23060704. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23060704/
This page is for education and is not a substitute for an in-person evaluation. Reviewed by Oliver Morris, DO, Medical Director.