How To Get Rid Of Dark Circles?

Dark circles aren't usually just caused by one problem. More often than not, they’re a mix of three things: the natural shadow under your eyes, discoloration (blue, purple, or brown tones), and puffiness. Knowing the root cause of your dark circles will help you address the issue.
The real question isn't how to hide dark circles. It's what's causing mine, and what can I genuinely change?
What's Causing Your Dark Circles?
Before figuring out how to fix your dark circles, it is important to know what is causing them.
Genetics
If your parents have dark circles, you probably will too. You can't change this, but you can minimize it with sun protection, brightening skincare, and makeup.
Sleep deprivation
When you're tired, blood vessels may dilate under your eyes, and you retain more fluid. A lack of sleep may make the shadows and circles under the eyes more obvious.
Dehydration
Dehydrated skin looks dull and may trigger fluid retention, making puffiness worse. If dehydration is the issue, drinking water fixes this faster than any product.
Sun damage
UV rays may damage thin undereye skin, causing pigmentation changes and darkening. Daily SPF prevents further damage.
Allergies
Histamine release may cause blood vessels to dilate and tissue to swell. Managing allergies addresses the root cause.
Age
Skin loses collagen, becoming thinner and more transparent. Blood vessels show more, and fine lines make shadows look deeper.
Most people have a combination of the above factors. Addressing the root cause (sleep, hydration, allergies, sun protection) paired with skincare and products helps combat the look of dark circles from all angles.
The Real Solutions to Your Dark Circle Problem
Start with these easy fixes. Lifestyle is just as important as skincare.
1. Sleep (The Fastest Fix)
Seven to nine hours may genuinely reduce puffiness and darkness. If you're getting less, start here. This is the most effective change most people can make.
2. Hydration
Drink water consistently. Dehydrated skin looks dull, and your body retains fluid to compensate, increasing puffiness.
3. Sun Protection
The undereye skin is thin and vulnerable. Apply mineral SPF daily. This prevents pigmentation changes and stops dark circles from getting darker. This is prevention, not a quick fix, but it matters long-term.
4. Manage Allergies
If seasonal or year-round allergies are your issue, addressing them can reduce undereye inflammation and puffiness.
5. Targeted Skincare Ingredients
Caffeine: Clinically proven to reduce puffiness and inflammation. Works within minutes to hours by improving circulation and reducing swelling.
Brightening peptides: Improve skin radiance over time. Won't erase genetic darkness, but minimize visible discoloration with consistent use.
Retinol alternatives: Peptide complexes or similar ingredients support collagen, thickening skin, and reducing fine lines. Thicker, healthier skin means less visible circles.
Hydrating ingredients: Hyaluronic acid and glycerin plump skin and can reduce shadows caused by dehydration.
Color Correction to Hide Dark Circles
Concealer alone doesn't neutralize discoloration. A color corrector for dark circles uses color theory. Blue or purple darkness needs warmth (peach or orange). Brown or greenish darkness needs pink. An undereye color corrector eliminates discoloration before concealer, so you need less coverage overall.
Most traditional color correctors for under the eyes are just pigment. Better products combine correction with actual skincare, so you're addressing dark circles on multiple levels.
| Problem | Corrector Shade | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Blue/purple darkness | Peach or coral | Warm cancels cool |
| Brown/green darkness | Pink or salmon | Pink neutralizes brown |
What You Should Look For in Products to Fix Dark Circles
If you're using undereye products, prioritize:
-
Caffeine or coffee extract for puffiness (clinically effective, works fast)
-
Brightening peptides for discoloration (improves skin radiance over time)
-
Mineral SPF for protection (gentle on sensitive undereye skin)
-
Multiple shades for different skin tones, if it includes a corrective tint
-
Skincare-infused formula rather than just makeup
A product combining correction, brightening ingredients, caffeine for depuffing, and SPF means you address multiple concerns in one step instead of layering multiple products.
Our ReFresh Eye Brightener SPF 30 + Correcting Tint does this: it includes correcting tint in four shades, caffeine and coffee seed extract for puffiness, brightening peptides (GlowPlex™), a skin-firming alternative to retinol (Tightenyl™), and 100% mineral SPF 30. The cooling metal rollerball provides instant depuffing while you apply.
This approach means you're not just hiding dark circles, you're actually improving undereye skin.
Final Thoughts
Dark circles are one of those stubborn things that make you look tired even when you're not.
At RMS Beauty, we believe in clean ingredients that actually perform, because your eye care should be formulated with ingredients you can trust.
The goal is to work with your skin. Sleep better. Stay hydrated. Protect against sun damage. Address the things you can control and supplement with skincare that actually works. And when you want to look fresher for an important day, use a color corrector for dark circles that does real work, not just coverage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. How long does a consistent eye care routine take to show improvement in my dark circles?
It depends on the kind of dark circles you have. Dark circles caused by sleep and puffiness may improve sooner than those caused by sun damage and genetic discoloration.
Q. Do I need a corrector and concealer?
It depends. If your concealer alone isn’t covering it, then adding a color-corrector before as a base can help. A corrector neutralizes discoloration, while a concealer provides coverage. Using both works better than either alone.
Q. What if nothing works?
See a dermatologist. Dark circles sometimes signal allergies, thyroid issues, or other concerns.
Q. Can dark circles signal a health problem?
Possibly. If circles persist despite good sleep and hydration, consider allergies, thyroid issues, or anemia. Worth mentioning to your doctor.
Q. Should I use an undereye color corrector daily?
You can use ReFresh daily with or without makeup. The lightweight formula includes skincare benefits and SPF, so you're actually caring for the area, not just masking it.














