AM vs PM Skincare Routine: What's the Difference and Why It Matters

AM vs PM Skincare Routine: What's the Difference and Why It Matters

One of the most common questions in skincare is whether you really need a different routine in the morning and evening — or whether you can simply use the same products twice a day. The answer is that morning and evening routines serve genuinely different purposes, and understanding this distinction can significantly improve the results you get from your skincare.

This guide explains the key differences between AM and PM skincare, which ingredients belong in each routine, and how to build both using Ammuri’s range.

Why Are Morning and Evening Routines Different?

Your skin behaves differently during the day and at night:

  • During the day — your skin is exposed to UV radiation, pollution, free radicals and environmental stressors. Your morning routine should focus on protection and defence
  • At night — your skin enters a repair and renewal mode. Cell turnover increases, and the skin is more receptive to active ingredients. Your evening routine should focus on treatment and renewal

Some ingredients are specifically suited to one time of day — retinol, for example, degrades in UV light and increases photosensitivity, making it an evening-only ingredient. Vitamin C and SPF, on the other hand, provide their greatest benefit in the morning when UV exposure is a factor.

Your Morning (AM) Routine: Protect and Brighten

The goal of your morning routine is to protect your skin from the day’s environmental stressors and support a bright, even complexion.

Step 1: Gentle Cleanser

A light cleanse to remove overnight product residue and prepare the skin for your morning actives. In the morning, a gentle rinse or micellar water is often sufficient.

Step 2: Niacinamide Serum

Ammuri’s Niacinamide 10% Brightening Elixir helps to even skin tone, minimise pores and support the skin barrier. Suitable for morning use and compatible with all other morning actives.

Shop Niacinamide 10% Elixir →

Step 3: Peptide Serum (Optional)

Ammuri’s Age Reverse Peptide Serum can be used in the morning to support firmness and elasticity throughout the day. Apply after niacinamide.

Shop Age Reverse Peptide Serum →

Step 4: Vitamin C SPF50 Day Cream — Essential

The most important step in your morning routine. Ammuri’s Vitamin C SPF50 Day Cream provides broad-spectrum UV protection alongside vitamin C antioxidant defence and daily hydration — all in one step.

Shop Vitamin C SPF50 Day Cream →

Your Evening (PM) Routine: Treat and Renew

The goal of your evening routine is to support the skin’s natural overnight repair processes and deliver active ingredients that work best without UV interference.

Step 1: Thorough Cleanse

Remove SPF, makeup and the day’s buildup. Double cleansing (oil cleanser followed by a gentle foaming cleanser) is particularly effective for removing SPF completely.

Step 2: Niacinamide Serum

Apply Ammuri’s Niacinamide 10% Brightening Elixir again. Its melanin-inhibiting and barrier-supporting benefits are valuable both morning and evening.

Step 3: Retinol or Exosome Serum

On retinol nights (3–4 per week), apply your chosen Ammuri Retinol Serum. On non-retinol nights, use Ammuri’s Exosome Brightening Serum for targeted brightening and renewal.

Shop Retinol 3.5% Serum →

Shop Exosome Brightening Serum →

Step 4: Soothing and Hydrating Layer

Apply Ammuri’s Organic Aloe Vera Gel after retinol to soothe and hydrate. On non-retinol nights, use the Age Reverse Peptide Serum followed by a richer moisturiser if needed.

Shop Organic Aloe Vera Gel →

AM vs PM: Which Ingredients Go Where?

Ingredient Morning Evening
Vitamin C ✓ Best in AM Can be used
SPF50 ✓ Essential ✗ Not needed
Retinol ✗ Evening only ✓ Essential
Niacinamide ✓ Both ✓ Both
Peptides ✓ Both ✓ Both
Exosome serum ✓ Both ✓ Both
Aloe vera gel ✓ Both ✓ Both

Build Your Complete Day and Night Routine

Shop Anti-Ageing Night Routine Bundle →


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a different routine in the morning and evening?

Yes — morning and evening routines serve different purposes. Your morning routine should focus on protection (SPF, antioxidants); your evening routine should focus on treatment and renewal (retinol, exosome serums). Some ingredients, like niacinamide and peptides, can be used at both times.

Can I use retinol in the morning?

No — retinol should only be used in the evening. It degrades in UV light and increases photosensitivity, making morning use counterproductive. Always apply retinol at night and follow with SPF the next morning.

Can I use the same moisturiser morning and evening?

Yes — if your moisturiser does not contain SPF, it can be used morning and evening. However, in the morning you must always apply a separate SPF50 as the final step. Ammuri’s Vitamin C SPF50 Day Cream combines moisturiser and SPF in one morning step.

Do I need to cleanse in the morning if I cleansed at night?

A light morning cleanse is generally recommended to remove overnight product residue and sebum. A gentle rinse or micellar water is often sufficient — a full double cleanse is not necessary in the morning.

Can I use vitamin C at night?

Vitamin C can technically be used at night, but it delivers its greatest benefit in the morning when its antioxidant properties can protect against UV-related free radicals throughout the day. Morning use alongside SPF is the most effective approach.

How many products should I use morning and evening?

A simple, effective routine can be as few as 3 products morning and evening. More is not always better — a consistent routine with well-chosen products will always outperform a complicated one that is difficult to maintain.


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