Learn about common pigmentation concerns such as melasma, sunspots, freckles, and post-inflammatory marks — including what causes them and which treatment options may help improve uneven skin tone.
At The Ritz Clinic in Johor Bahru, we assess whether pigmentation is superficial or deeper, whether it is linked to hormones, sun exposure, inflammation, or skin sensitivity, and whether the skin also needs calming or barrier support before treatment.
Pigmentation can develop due to excess melanin production, inflammation, hormonal triggers, skin sensitivity, or repeated sun exposure.
Ultraviolet exposure can stimulate melanin production and worsen sunspots, freckles, and uneven tone over time.
Hormonal influence may trigger melasma and make pigmentation more stubborn or more likely to recur.
Acne, irritation, eczema, friction, or other skin inflammation can leave dark marks after the skin heals.
Easily irritated skin may become inflamed more easily, increasing the risk of persistent pigmentation or rebound darkening.
Different pigmentation concerns can look similar on the surface, but they may respond differently to treatment depending on depth, trigger, and skin condition.
Pigmentation treatment is usually planned according to the type of pigment, trigger factors, and how reactive or resilient the skin is. Some cases respond well to pigment-focused laser treatment, while others also need calming care, barrier support, and maintenance planning.
Pigmentation type, pigment depth, skin sensitivity, trigger factors such as hormones or sun exposure, and whether the skin also needs calming or barrier support.
Not all pigmentation should be treated the same way. Melasma, post-inflammatory marks, and sun-related pigment often require different treatment directions and different maintenance strategies.
Depending on your pigmentation type, skin sensitivity, and treatment goals, our doctors may recommend different treatment approaches.
Doctor will recommend based on your skin condition during consultation.
Helps target unwanted pigment such as sunspots, post-inflammatory marks, and uneven skin tone.
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Supports brighter-looking, more revitalised skin as part of a broader pigmentation plan.
Learn More →Doctor will recommend based on your skin condition during consultation.
Supports skin repair and may be useful when pigmentation is linked with sensitivity or inflammation.
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May help support calmer, healthier skin when pigmentation is accompanied by reactivity or slower skin recovery.
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May be considered when pigmentation is paired with dryness, irritation, or weaker skin quality.
Learn More →The most suitable treatment direction depends on whether the main concern is deeper pigment, post-inflammatory marks, recurrent melasma, or sensitive skin that needs a gentler treatment plan.
Pigmentation is not always just a surface concern. It may involve hormones, inflammation, skin sensitivity, and recurrence risk. At The Ritz Clinic, treatment planning is guided by experienced doctors so recommendations can be adapted to your pigmentation type, skin condition, and long-term goals.
Results vary between individuals. A consultation is recommended before starting any treatment.
Common questions patients ask about melasma, dark spots, uneven tone, and recurring pigmentation.
Not always. Some forms of pigmentation can improve with treatment and strict sun protection, while others such as melasma may recur and need long-term maintenance.
Common types include melasma, sunspots, freckles, and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. A proper assessment helps guide the most suitable treatment approach.
Yes. Pigmentation can recur due to sun exposure, hormones, inflammation, heat, or inconsistent maintenance, especially in melasma-prone skin.
Not always. Some cases may also need skin-calming care, brightening skincare, barrier support, and a personalised maintenance plan instead of relying on one treatment alone.
Book a consultation to get a personalised assessment for melasma, dark spots, and uneven skin tone.