Protocol

The Anti-Aging Protocol

How Korean dermatologists structure anti-aging by decade — prevention in the 30s, correction in the 40s, maintenance in the 50s+. Peptides, retinoids, PDRN, and collagen support, sequenced for long-term skin health.

Lifetime Program
Updated April 2026
13 min read

Korean anti-aging skincare is structurally different from Western anti-aging skincare. Western approaches focus on correction — the wrinkle exists, what product erases it. Korean approaches focus on cellular health over time — what's happening at the fibroblast level, and how do we support it across decades.

The practical result is that Korean dermatologists prescribe by phase, not by symptom. A 35-year-old with no visible wrinkles gets a different protocol than a 45-year-old with the same visible skin — because the biological state underneath differs, and the intervention scales accordingly.

This protocol breaks anti-aging into three life stages: prevention (roughly 30s), correction (roughly 40s), and maintenance (roughly 50s+). The ages are approximate — skin biology doesn't care about birthdays. Assess where your skin actually is and start there.

The Korean Anti-Aging Philosophy

Three principles shape Korean anti-aging skincare:

1. Prevention is dramatically more effective than correction. A 35-year-old starting a preventative protocol will have better skin at 55 than a 45-year-old starting an aggressive corrective protocol. This isn't marketing — it's how collagen degradation works. Lost collagen is expensive to rebuild; preserved collagen is cheap to maintain.

2. Cellular support matters more than symptom treatment. Korean derms rarely prescribe a single "wrinkle cream." They prescribe systems — peptides to signal fibroblast activity, PDRN to support cellular regeneration, retinoids to regulate turnover, sunscreen to prevent damage. Each addresses a different layer of the aging process.

3. Tolerability and consistency beat intensity. A 0.3% retinol used nightly for 5 years outperforms a 1.0% retinol used aggressively for 6 months and then abandoned because of irritation. Korean protocols build tolerance deliberately and prioritize long-term compliance.

Prevention (30s): The Foundation Decade

Your 30s are the most leveraged decade for skincare. Collagen production begins declining at about 1% per year starting in your mid-20s, but visible signs don't appear until your 30s. This gap is your window. What you do now determines what your skin looks like at 50.

The goal

Preserve existing collagen, protect against photodamage, establish foundational routines, begin gentle regenerative support.

Morning routine

Evening routine (alternating)

Retinoid nights (3x per week):

PDRN nights (3x per week):

Rest night (1x per week):

Professional treatments (optional but effective in 30s)

What NOT to do in your 30s

Correction (40s): The Work Decade

By the early 40s, collagen loss becomes visible — fine lines around the eyes and mouth, subtle loss of firmness, slower recovery from stressors. Estrogen decline in late 40s accelerates this. The 40s is when Korean dermatology shifts from prevention to active intervention.

The goal

Rebuild what's been lost, accelerate collagen synthesis, address specific concerns (pigmentation, fine lines, loss of firmness) while continuing prevention.

Morning routine

Evening routine (alternating)

Retinoid nights (3x per week):

PDRN + Peptide nights (3x per week):

Recovery night (1x per week):

Professional treatments (recommended in 40s)

Korean-specific treatments to consider

Maintenance (50s+): The Sustainability Decade

In the 50s and beyond, the goal shifts from intervention to sustained cellular support. Skin has less recovery capacity. Aggressive retinoid ramps can cause chronic irritation. Ultra-active routines backfire. Korean dermatologists prescribe gentler, more consistent protocols with strategic professional treatments.

The goal

Maintain the results of 30s and 40s work. Support skin barrier function, continue collagen preservation, adjust for hormonal and cellular changes, avoid irritation that causes regression.

Morning routine

Evening routine

Nightly (all nights):

Professional treatments (50s+)

Principles That Apply Every Decade

1. Sunscreen is the single most important product. No amount of retinol, PDRN, or laser work compensates for ongoing UV damage. Mineral SPF 50+ daily, reapplied every 2 hours outdoors.

2. Consistency beats intensity. The person who uses a mid-strength routine for 20 years looks better than the person who uses an aggressive routine for 5 years.

3. Sleep, stress, diet, and smoking matter more than skincare. Skincare adds perhaps 20% to what your lifestyle contributes. Prioritize the fundamentals.

4. Professional treatments accelerate what topicals can't achieve alone. Topical skincare maintains and prevents. Professional treatments correct and restore. The ideal protocol uses both.

5. Don't over-treat. Skin that looks over-worked reads as unnatural. Korean dermatology's gold standard is skin that looks healthy, not skin that looks "done."

What Not to Bother With

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I start anti-aging skincare?
Sunscreen and gentle hydration from your teens. Peptides and retinol in your late 20s to early 30s. PDRN in your 30s. Professional treatments as needed from your late 30s onward.

Is Korean skincare better than Western for anti-aging?
Different rather than better. Korean formulations tend to be gentler and more layered; Western formulations tend to be higher-concentration and more direct. Both can produce excellent results. The best approach combines both: Korean foundation routines with Western clinical-strength actives where appropriate (prescription tretinoin, high-percentage vitamin C, etc.).

What's the single biggest mistake people make with anti-aging?
Starting too late. Skincare's effects compound over decades. A 28-year-old thinking "I don't need this yet" is giving up compound returns that a 48-year-old can't manufacture. Start the foundation protocol earlier than you think you need to.

Do expensive products work better?
Sometimes. The top 30% of products by price include many of the most effective products. But so does the middle 30%. The bottom 30% — drugstore basics — includes some excellent options (Cerave ceramides, La Roche-Posay sunscreens) and some nearly useless ones. Price is a weak signal.

The peptides, PDRN, and barrier products in this protocol, coming to the US. Clinical-grade Korean anti-aging skincare sourced from Seoul's dermatology district. Growth-factor peptides, spicule-delivery PDRN, and ceramide-rich barrier creams formulated for mature skin. Get early access →