| Written by Dr. Park Kyungtae, Board-Certified Dermatologist at Bethel Dermatology
The more you cycle, the stronger your body becomes — but your skin often can't keep pace.
The reason is simple: UV exposure. Riders spend significantly more time in direct sunlight than the average person, and this accelerates photoaging — pigmentation, thinning skin, fine lines.
Sunscreen is essential, but it only prevents new damage; it can't reverse what's already accumulated. That's where recovery care comes in.
Does Riding Really Age Your Skin Faster?

Unfortunately, yes. Riders exposed to prolonged outdoor sunlight experience significantly more UV exposure, which triggers photoaging and accelerates the skin's aging process.
In clinical practice, riders tend to show a consistent pattern of skin changes:
- Increased pigmentation and dark spots across the face and arms
- Thinning skin
- Visible fine capillaries
- Deepening fine lines
- Loss of radiance and rougher skin texture
These aren't simply signs of natural aging — they reflect how accumulated UV exposure affects the skin's collagen and elastic structure over time. This isn't a matter of willpower or skincare habits. It's a matter of exposure.
How Much UV Does a Ride Actually Deliver?

For those who ride regularly, UV exposure levels go far beyond what's typical in daily life — in fact, by dermatological standards, they often fall into an extreme range.
Studies measuring UV exposure among professional cyclists during races have found that average daily exposure reached several times the minimum dose needed to cause skin erythema (redness), with levels climbing significantly higher on mountain stages. The longer riders spent outdoors, the more steeply their cumulative exposure rose.
You Don't Need to Ride Less
So should you cut back on riding to protect your skin? Not necessarily. Rather than reducing time on the bike, adding recovery is the more realistic answer.
Outdoor activity is one of the most well-established contributors to long-term health and quality of life. Just as training requires a balance of load and recovery, your skin follows the same principle.
- During activity: Reinforce UV protection through sunscreen, face masks, and similar measures
- Recovery: Add long-term treatments and care that support skin regeneration
The goal isn't a single procedure — it's designing a recovery routine you return to consistently.
Checking Skin Recovery Through a Metric You Already Know: HRV
HRV (Heart Rate Variability) is nothing new to riders. It's the number your watch shows you every morning, reflecting autonomic nervous system balance and recovery status.
Research on athletes has shown that HRV can be a useful indicator for tracking training adaptation and recovery status, as well as detecting overtraining early. Since skin's regenerative capacity is connected to the body's overall recovery state, a drop in HRV can be an early signal worth paying attention to — not a direct skin test, but a useful proxy for how well your skin is likely recovering too.
Recovery That Becomes a Routine, Not a One-Time Fix
Rather than relying on a single procedure, think in seasons. Check your current condition, adjust your care accordingly, then check in again before the next one begins — the same rhythm you already follow with training.
Your body adapts because you give it structure: load, recovery, repeat. Your skin responds to the same structure. The only difference is that most riders have a plan for one and not the other.
Next in this series: how to choose the right clinic, and which treatments actually make sense for a rider's skin and schedule.

>Book your appointment at Bethel Dermatology — where expert care is always available.
[FAQ]
Q. Isn't sunscreen alone enough?
Sunscreen is the most essential first step, but it cannot reverse photoaging damage that has already accumulated. Protection and regeneration serve different roles — for riders with high sun exposure, combining both often makes the real difference.
Q. How should I manage sunscreen during a long ride?
Since sweat and time reduce sunscreen's effectiveness, we recommend applying generously before you set out and reapplying during longer rides.
Q. Is it safe to get skin treatments while training heavily?
Yes, you can continue training while incorporating skin recovery care. That said, it's best to check your skin condition and recovery indicators (e.g., autonomic nervous system testing) together, and adjust the intensity and frequency of treatment accordingly.
Q. Does low HRV affect my skin too?
A lower HRV can signal that your body isn't fully recovering, and skin regeneration may be affected during periods of slower recovery. It's best used as a reference point alongside your overall recovery status, rather than a standalone diagnostic.
| Edited by Sia Shin, The Pylon Square