Seasonal Travel
Tropical climate skin – relaxed trip, not reactive skin
The tropics look soft in photos, but skin notices the shift fast. Higher humidity, stronger UV and temperature swings can drive up sebum, trigger prickly heat and make skin more reactive – especially when mosquito spray and sweat sit on top of everything.

Why does skin get so much fussier in the tropics?
It is not just “heat” causing the drama. When humidity rises, the outer skin layer swells more easily, sweat doesn’t evaporate as well and sebum can feel much more obvious. At the same time, stronger UV pushes skin into a more defensive mode, which often shows up as shine, bumps or that uncomfortable feeling that everything is sitting on the surface.
Mosquito spray is another classic troublemaker. DEET-interaction is not magic; it’s the messy reality that strong repellents, sunscreen, sweat and skin oils can affect how products sit on skin and how it feels afterward. Then, when people try to “fix” that with harsh cleansing or too much exfoliation, the barrier usually gets even more irritated.
There is a better way: understand the mechanism and stop treating tropical skin like it is dirty. Most of the time, skin needs less friction, fewer actives and more stability. That is not being fancy. That is just being kinder to skin under pressure.
Pack smarter for the tropics
Strip the routine back
Bring fewer products than you think you need. In humid weather, a calm oil, a steady serum and a gentle cleanser often work better than a full stack of acids and boosters.
Remove, don’t scrub
Use a mild evening cleanse after sunscreen, sweat and mosquito spray have sat on skin all day. Skin should feel clean and relieved, not tight and oddly shiny from irritation.
Layer with restraint
If skin feels hot or bumpy, choose thin layers instead of heavy creams. In tropical air, supporting the barrier is usually smarter than sealing everything in.
Don’t ignore the beard
A full beard can become a small heat trap. Rinse out sweat and sprays properly, and keep the routine simple so the skin underneath doesn’t get stuck in the same sticky loop.
Plan an evening reset
After beach, city and mosquito spray, give skin a calm reset at night. That is often when prickly heat and sebum overload feel strongest, especially if temperatures stay high.

How to actually handle tropical skin
In humid weather, the smartest move is rarely more intensity. It is stability. The DUO kit with The ONE and I LOVE gives skin a steady baseline year-round: The ONE helps skin stay balanced, while I LOVE brings in CBG for moments when skin feels hot, oily or easily thrown off by climate and friction.
For days when you want an extra protective layer, Ta-DA serum fits naturally. Its antioxidant cocktail with CBG and adaptogens feels like the sensible choice when UV, heat and travel stress skin more than usual. Not a dramatic rescue, just an extra layer of care for weather that asks a lot from skin.
And after mosquito spray, sweat and sunscreen have done their thing? Au Naturel Makeup Remover with MCT oil is gentle enough not to aggravate already irritated skin. It removes what needs removing without starting a cleansing war. That is the point here: less aggression, more skin logic.
Products we recommend

Save €34DUO kit
Two face oils, one for morning and one for evening. Simple skincare that works with your skin, not against it.


TA-DA Serum
A CBG-powered serum that seals in moisture and adds glow, whatever the season.


Au Naturel Makeup Remover
A cleansing oil with MCT and CBD that removes makeup and buildup without stripping your skin bare.
Frequently asked questions
Can humid weather make skin oilier?
Yes, many people notice more sebum and a shinier feel when humidity is high. Skin feels heavier not because it is dirtier, but because sweat, heat and oil all start working together.
How does mosquito spray affect skin?
Repellents can make skin feel more sensitive when combined with sweat, sunscreen and friction. That is why a gentle evening cleanse makes more sense than trying to scrub everything off right away.
What is prickly heat?
Prickly heat happens when sweat ducts are more easily blocked in hot, humid conditions. It can cause small red bumps and a prickly feeling, especially if skin is already irritated.
Do I need a whole new routine for travel?
Not a whole new one, but simplification helps a lot. A stable base of gentle cleansing, soothing serum and a skin-regulating oil goes a long way when the climate is already doing plenty.
Sources
- Engebretsen KA, Johansen JD, Kezic S, Linneberg A, Thyssen JP. The effect of environmental humidity and temperature on skin barrier function and dermatitis. J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2016;30(2):223–249.
- Lin TK, Zhong L, Santiago JL. Anti-Inflammatory and Skin Barrier Repair Effects of Topical Application of Some Plant Oils. Int J Mol Sci 2017;19(1):70.
Article reviewed by Christopher Genberg, founder of 1753 SKINCARE.
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