Acne Scars: Causes & Treatment Options in Leicester

50 clinics offering treatments • 4.8 avg rating (214 reviews) • 27 accredited • Within 50 miles

Expert guide to causes & treatments

acne scars in Leicester are one of the most satisfying concerns to treat when done properly, and one of the most disappointing when the scar type is misidentified or the protocol is too generic. Among 50 verified clinics in Leicester offering scar treatment, expect a mix of microneedling, chemical peels, laser resurfacing and PRP therapy, often used in combination rather than isolation. UK regulation is a useful filter when choosing between clinics. Class 3B and Class 4 lasers require a Laser Protection Adviser and operator Core of Knowledge qualifications. In Scotland and Wales, clinics using these lasers need HIS or HIW registration. Chemical peels at medium depth (TCA 20 to 35 percent) should only be performed by a clinician trained in dealing with unintended deeper penetration. PRP therapy involves blood handling and requires correct tube and centrifuge protocols. In England, any clinic breaking the skin should be CQC-registered. A proper acne scars consultation in Leicester assesses the scar type, photographs the area with oblique lighting to capture texture, screens for skin phototype and scarring tendency, and plans a staged treatment course rather than offering a single session. Clinicians registered with the GMC, NMC or HCPC, working from registered premises, are the minimum standard. The 50 clinics listed have been verified against these criteria.

What are acne scars?

Acne scars are the permanent changes in skin texture that remain after active acne has resolved. They form when the inflammation of a cyst, papule or pustule damages the dermis deeply enough that the normal architecture of collagen and elastic tissue cannot fully rebuild. The resulting scars fall into several distinct types, and correctly identifying which type is present is the single most important step in planning treatment, because the right treatment for one scar morphology can be almost entirely useless for another.

The main categories are atrophic scars (the most common, where tissue has been lost), hypertrophic scars and keloid scars (where tissue has over-healed and sits raised above the surrounding skin). Atrophic scars are further divided into ice-pick scars (narrow, deep, V-shaped depressions), rolling scars (broader, shallower undulations caused by dermal tethering), and boxcar scars (wide, sharply-defined depressions with vertical walls). A patient often has several types simultaneously, which is why a stepped, combined approach produces better results than relying on a single technique. Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation and erythema often coexist, particularly in deeper skin phototypes, adding a colour component that needs to be addressed alongside the texture.

The UK aesthetics response combines several modalities. Microneedling, using a motorised pen or medical dermaroller, creates controlled micro-injuries across the scarred area, triggering collagen and elastin remodelling. It is particularly effective for rolling and shallow boxcar scars, and is often combined with PRP therapy, where the patient's own platelet-rich plasma is applied topically or injected to enhance the healing response. Chemical peels, from superficial glycolic or salicylic acid peels through to medium-depth TCA and Jessner's peels, address pigmentation and the most superficial textural changes, and the TCA CROSS technique delivers high-concentration TCA into individual ice-pick scars to remodel them from the base upwards. Laser resurfacing, using fractional non-ablative or ablative lasers, is the most aggressive non-surgical option and produces the most visible textural change for deeper or mixed scarring, with longer downtime and greater risk of post-inflammatory pigmentation, particularly in deeper phototypes. Subcision (release of the fibrous tethers beneath rolling scars) is sometimes performed alongside these treatments to improve results.

Active acne must be controlled before scar treatment begins, because treating over active breakouts risks worsening the scarring. Patients with darker phototypes, a history of keloid scarring, or recent isotretinoin use need careful staging and often adjusted protocols to minimise risk.

Treatment Options in Leicester

Clinics in Leicester

50 verified clinics in Leicester offer treatments for acne scars. Across 214 patient reviews, clinics average 4.8 stars. 27 clinics hold professional accreditations.

Explore all 50 clinics via the treatment pages above.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What types of acne scars are there?

The three main types are ice pick scars (deep, narrow pits), boxcar scars (broad depressions with sharp edges), and rolling scars (wide, undulating depressions). Many people have a mix of types. Treatment choice depends on the dominant scar type.

What is the most effective treatment for acne scars?

No single treatment works for all scar types. Microneedling is effective for rolling and shallow boxcar scars. Chemical peels work well for surface irregularities. Laser resurfacing can address deeper scarring. PRP therapy boosts healing when combined with other treatments.

How many treatments are needed?

Most patients need 3-6 sessions of their chosen treatment, spaced 4-6 weeks apart. Improvement is gradual as collagen remodelling occurs over months. Combining treatments often produces better results than using a single approach.

Can acne scars be completely removed?

Significant improvement is achievable — typically 50-80% improvement in scar appearance over a course of treatments. Complete removal of deep scars is difficult, but modern treatments can dramatically improve skin texture and confidence.

Should I wait until acne is under control before treating scars?

Yes. Active acne should be managed first, as ongoing breakouts can create new scars and compromise healing from scar treatments. Most practitioners recommend being breakout-free for at least 3 months before starting scar revision.

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