Most people think of skincare as something that happens on the face. The cleansers, serums, retinoids, SPF, and devices are all aimed at the face. The neck gets what runs off. This is a common pattern and a predictable one, given that skincare marketing overwhelmingly focuses on facial concerns. But the neck and chest age through the same biological processes as the face, experience the same environmental damage, and respond to the same interventions. The difference is how consistently they receive them.
The Anatomy of the Problem
The skin of the neck has distinct structural characteristics that make it particularly vulnerable to visible aging. It is thinner than facial skin, with a lower density of sebaceous glands providing natural moisture. The collagen and elastin fibres in the neck dermis are subject to the same age-related degradation as the face, declining at roughly 1% per year from the mid-20s onward.
What makes the neck disproportionately affected is the combination of this inherent fragility with consistent neglect. Most people apply broad-spectrum SPF to the face daily but stop at the jawline. They apply retinoids and antioxidants to the face but not the neck. They use collagen-stimulating devices on the face but not the neck. The cumulative effect of years of differential care is visible: the face looks well maintained while the neck tells a different age story.
Sun Damage: The Neck’s Biggest Problem
Chronic UV exposure is the primary driver of visible skin aging, responsible for roughly 80% of the visible changes we associate with getting older. The neck and chest receive significant sun exposure, particularly in everyday activities like driving, sitting outdoors, or simply walking to and from work in summer months, without the consistent SPF protection most people apply to their faces.
The result is accelerated collagen breakdown, pigmentation changes, and textural deterioration that becomes increasingly visible from the 40s onward. The decolletage in particular accumulates decades of UV damage that shows up as the characteristic mottled pigmentation and crepey texture that is so difficult to address once established.
The Tech Neck Factor
A more recent contribution to neck skin aging is the postural and mechanical impact of sustained downward head position from device use. Horizontal neck lines that previously appeared only in older adults are now showing up significantly earlier. While the direct skin-aging impact is debated in the research, the increased awareness of neck appearance has driven more people to pay attention to this area earlier in life, which is broadly positive from a prevention standpoint.
What Actually Works for the Neck
The interventions with the strongest evidence for neck skin improvement are the same ones that work on the face. Topical retinoids stimulate collagen production. Antioxidants including vitamin C protect against ongoing oxidative damage. Niacinamide addresses barrier function and tone. And device-based treatments that deliver energy to the dermal layer, where structural aging occurs, produce changes that topicals alone cannot.
Among device options, red light therapy is the most practical for home use. A handheld wand used consistently on the neck produces the same photobiomodulation effects documented for facial skin: increased fibroblast activity, elevated collagen synthesis, and reduced inflammation. For anyone starting to pay attention to this area, incorporating red light therapy for neck treatment into an existing skincare routine is the most evidence-backed step they can take.
Building a Neck Skincare Routine
The foundational principle is to treat the neck as an extension of the face rather than a separate afterthought. Whatever you apply to your face, apply to your neck. Whatever device you use on your face, extend the session to the neck.
Morning: gentle cleanser, vitamin C or antioxidant serum on both face and neck, moisturiser, SPF 30 or higher on face and neck. The SPF step on the neck is the single most impactful change most people can make.
Evening: gentle cleanser, red light therapy session on face and neck (ten to fifteen minutes), retinoid two to three times per week applied to face and neck, peptide or niacinamide serum, moisturiser.
The key behaviour change is extending each product and each device session below the jawline as a default rather than an occasional addition. The neck responds to consistent care. It does not require a completely separate product lineup or a significantly longer routine. It requires inclusion in the routine that already exists.
When to Start
Prevention is significantly more effective than reversal for neck skin aging. The ideal time to start a neck skincare routine is in the 20s or early 30s, before significant structural changes have accumulated. That said, people who start in their 40s or 50s still see meaningful improvements with consistent treatment, particularly with device-based interventions that stimulate new collagen production.
The research on photobiomodulation shows collagen density improvements across a range of ages. Starting is always better than waiting for the perfect moment.
For the clinical evidence on red light therapy and collagen production across different skin areas and age groups, the NIH PubMed photobiomodulation skin research database is the most comprehensive publicly accessible resource.






