10 Best Retinol Alternatives for Menopause, Sensitive Skin and Pregnancy
Last updated on March 25th, 2026 at 12:37 pm
If retinol hasn’t worked for you, you’re not alone. Maybe it left your skin dry and peeling. Maybe you’re pregnant or going through menopause and your skin needs a gentler approach. Perhaps you live in the EU where over-the-counter concentrations are now capped at 0.3%, and higher strength products are no longer on the shelf.
As a pharmacologist, I’ve looked at the formulation and chemistry behind each of these alternatives, and what follows are the ones that deliver. Whatever brought you here, there are real, science-backed retinol substitutes that deliver results, and this article walks you through all of them.

What Does Retinol Do? (And Why You Need an Alternative)
Retinol is topical vitamin A, and it earns its reputation. It improves how skin cells turn over, how they behave, and how they differentiate. It reduces clogged pores, fades dark spots and hyperpigmentation, and with consistent long-term use, it builds collagen in the deeper layers of your skin, which smooths wrinkles and fine lines. It also helps minimize UV damage. For an over-the-counter ingredient, that’s a remarkably broad range of benefits.
But tolerating it is a different matter entirely. Peeling, dryness, redness, and prolonged irritation stop a lot of people before they ever see results, and for some skin types, that irritation simply doesn’t resolve no matter how slowly you introduce it.
The alternatives in this article aren’t second-best options and neither are they simple retinol replacements. Several target the same biological pathways as retinol, delivering real improvements in cell turnover, collagen production, and pigmentation. And some, particularly for menopause-related collagen loss, address concerns that retinol doesn’t even touch.
1. Bakuchiol, the Best Natural Retinol Alternative for Sensitive Skin
Bakuchiol comes from the babchi plant and has solid clinical backing for a plant-derived ingredient. In a 12-week study, people using 0.5% bakuchiol twice daily saw the same reduction in wrinkles and hyperpigmentation as those using 0.5% retinol once daily, but without the scaling and stinging.
It works by activating retinoid receptors in your skin, which is why it produces similar results to retinol. This drives cell turnover, improves tone and texture, reduces fine lines, and provides antioxidant protection. Because it’s photostable, you can use it morning and night without the sun sensitivity that comes with retinol.
It is less potent than retinol and takes longer to show results, but as a natural alternative to retinol, it keeps your skin comfortable throughout, which means you can stay consistent with it.
For product options, The Inkey List makes a budget-friendly 1% bakuchiol moisturizer that works well for beginners. Biossance’s Squalane and Phyto-Retinol Serum pairs bakuchiol with squalane if you need extra hydration, and Olehenriksen’s Glow Cycle Retin-ALT Power Serum adds AHAs for faster results. If you’re pregnant or breastfeeding, always confirm with your doctor first before using bakuchiol.


