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AI skin analysis: what it is and why experts warn against it

You might have seen AI-powered health tools that claim to analyse your skin after you upload a photo online. One example is the viral ChatGPT ‘Skincare Analysis’ trend, where users ask AI to assess concerns such as acne, pigmentation, or ageing from a selfie alone.

While these tools are growing in popularity for offering quick, accessible feedback, experts warn they can often do more harm than good for your health.

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What is AI ‘skin analysis’?

Asking online tools to assess your skin’s health isn’t exactly new, but it’s gathering momentum with the rise of AI. Increasingly, platforms - especially those backed by beauty brands - promise that simply uploading a selfie can provide a comprehensive skincare analysis.

Dr Anjali Mahto, Consultant Dermatologist and Founder of Self London, UK, says that ChatGPT’s ‘Skincare Analysis’ is the latest tool riding this wave of popularity.

“This trend involves users uploading a portrait of themselves to ChatGPT and asking the AI to generate a full, dermatologist-style skincare analysis graphic,” she explains. “Instead of a standard text reply, the AI produces a highly polished visual report detailing perceived skin type, texture, hydration levels, and product recommendations.”

Mahto adds that a person’s selfie is transformed into a clinical-looking document, complete with a magnified face layout, comparison zones, and charts. The tool uses concise labels and icons to visually dissect the face, highlighting microscopic details such as pores, fine lines, and skin texture.

“This is designed to look like a premium medical consultation sheet, which gives it a false sense of clinical authority,” she warns. “But essentially, people are using a chatbot as a diagnostic tool for their selfies, which, as a dermatologist, I find deeply concerning.”

Dr Anjali Mahto

Dr Anjali Mahto, Consultant Dermatologist and Founder of Self London, UK

The ‘skincare analysis’ craze is spreading on social media, with users enthusiastically sharing their AI-generated visual reports and comparing them as if the results were medically accurate - which they are not.

Mahto notes that while people once used AI for simple photo edits, it is now being used as a personalised visual guide for daily skincare routines.

“The polished, shareable format of these graphics makes them highly viral, encouraging more people to scrutinise their own faces in the same way,” she says.

“The main danger of using a chatbot to clinically dissect a selfie rather than seeking professional help is that it triggers an extreme, unhealthy hyperawareness of entirely normal facial features. A chatbot lacks the medical training to understand the nuance of human biology, meaning it often pathologises completely healthy skin.”

Mahto adds that relying on AI for diagnoses can also delay people from seeking real medical help for actual skin conditions that require prescription treatments.

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Using AI-generated ‘health reports’ for your skin doesn’t mean you’re consulting a qualified professional who can distinguish between real skin conditions and normal skin features. For this reason, skincare analysis tools can not only misdiagnose you but also make you believe that perfectly normal aspects of your face are flaws.

Mahto emphasises that AI cannot distinguish between normal, healthy biological features and actual dermatological conditions.

“It often treats a visible pore with the same level of 'correction' as a severe case of acne,” she explains. “This is why diagnosing skin requires years of medical training and hands-on experience with actual patients, not a clever algorithm. It actively treats natural biological necessities as flaws that need to be ‘fixed’ with products.

“For example, it will highlight visible pores, minor texture, and natural hydration fluctuations as issues requiring intervention. Pores and slight imperfections are entirely normal and essential for healthy skin function, yet the AI frames them as problems.”

How AI contributes to skin anxiety

It’s widely recognised that many online platforms - with their constant pressure to look ‘perfect,’ even though that’s neither realistic nor a true reflection of human life - have contributed to concerning behavioural and mental health effects. The same is true for the skincare analysis trend.

Mahto points out that social media filters have already set an impossible, poreless ideal for us to chase. But this trend takes the psychological impact to an entirely new level.

“By using AI to draw magnified circles around tiny details, we are fuelling a modern epidemic of skin-focused anxiety and body dysmorphia,” she says.

“We have collectively forgotten what normal, great skin actually looks like, replacing it with an unattainable, AI-generated standard. It's deeply concerning as a medic.”

Unlike AI, dermatologists focus on treating real skin conditions - such as acne, rosacea, and severe pigmentation - rather than normal biological features.

As Mahto explains, their main goal is to help people maintain healthy, functional skin.

“We do not seek to erase normal biological features such as pores or natural texture because we understand they are vital to the skin's ecosystem,” she says.

“Consumers must remember that an AI is generating recommendations based on an algorithm's critique of a 2D image, not a medical understanding of your skin's health.”

Mahto advises that before you spend money on AI-suggested serums or cleansers, it’s worth considering whether you are addressing a genuine skin concern - or simply chasing an impossible, AI-driven standard of perfection.

“Always consult a qualified professional for real concerns," she concludes. "You should never trust a chatbot with your health."

Frequently asked questions

What kind of details do AI 'skin analysis' tools highlight from a selfie?

When you upload a selfie to these AI tools, your image is transformed into a clinical-looking document. It uses concise labels and icons to visually dissect your face, highlighting microscopic details such as pores, fine lines, and skin texture. The AI generates a detailed visual report on perceived skin type, texture, hydration levels, and even suggests products.

Why is it concerning that AI skin analysis tools make reports look like medical documents?

These tools are designed to create reports that resemble premium medical consultation sheets, which gives them a false sense of clinical authority. This can be deeply concerning because people are using a chatbot as a diagnostic tool for their selfies, despite the AI lacking medical training and the ability to understand the nuance of human biology.

Can AI accurately tell the difference between normal skin features and actual skin conditions?

No, AI cannot accurately distinguish between normal, healthy biological features and actual dermatological conditions. It often treats a visible pore with the same level of 'correction' as a severe case of acne, framing natural and essential features as problems that need to be 'fixed' with products, rather than understanding them as normal. Diagnosing skin requires years of medical training and hands-on experience, not just an algorithm.

What is the main difference in focus between an AI skin analysis tool and a dermatologist?

The main difference is that AI focuses on an algorithm's critique of a 2D image, often pathologising normal biological features like pores, minor texture, and natural hydration fluctuations as flaws. In contrast, dermatologists focus on treating real skin conditions like acne, rosacea, and severe pigmentation, aiming to help people maintain healthy, functional skin. They understand that normal biological features are vital and do not seek to erase them.

How can using AI skin analysis tools affect a person's mental health?

Using AI skin analysis tools can significantly contribute to skin-focused anxiety and body dysmorphia. These tools scrutinise and magnify tiny details, which can lead to an extreme and unhealthy hyperawareness of entirely normal facial features. This trend replaces a realistic understanding of normal skin with an unattainable, AI-generated standard of perfection, further intensifying the psychological impact of social media's poreless ideals.

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About the authorView full bio

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Victoria Raw

Feature Writer

BA (Hons), English Literature

Victoria is a content writer with Patient whose special interests focus on mental wellbeing, societal trends and the impact of technology on our health.

About the reviewerView full bio

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Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP

General Practitioner, Medical Author

MBBS, MRCGP, MRCP (Paediatrics), DCH

Dr Colin Tidy is an NHS Doctor, based in Oxfordshire.

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The information on this page is peer reviewed by qualified clinicians.

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