SKIN1004 Tea-Trica Spot Cream 15ml tube — tea tree, salicylic acid, and sulfur acne spot treatment
79 /100 Score
What Makes This Different

A genuinely multi-mechanism spot treatment that combines tea tree, salicylic acid, sulfur, zinc oxide, and the centella triterpene panel. It's more aggressive than the rest of the Tea-Trica line and more effective on active pimples, with sulfur quietly doing more work than most users expect.

SKIN1004

Tea-Trica Spot Cream

Multi-Active Spot Treatment
k beautyFragrance FreeParaben FreeCruelty FreeVegan

A genuinely multi-mechanism spot treatment that combines tea tree, salicylic acid, sulfur, zinc oxide, and the centella triterpene panel. It's more aggressive than the rest of the Tea-Trica line and more effective on active pimples, with sulfur quietly doing more work than most users expect.

$14.00
15ml
4.3
290 reviews
Data Confidence: medium
Made in South Korea Launched 2023 PAO: 12 months
Buy at Amazon
Scores

Score Breakdown

A well-designed multi-mechanism spot treatment with tea tree, salicylic acid, sulfur, and zinc on a centella base. Competent and effective on active breakouts, though aggressive for sensitive skin even as a spot product.

Data Confidence: medium
0 /100
Overall Score
Ingredient Quality 0
Value for Money 0
Suitability Breadth 0
Irritation Risk (↑ = safer) 0
Verdict

Pros & Cons

Pros
  • Multi-mechanism formula with four complementary acne actives
  • Sulfur inclusion is unusual and genuinely useful for spot treatment
  • Full centella triterpene panel buffers the aggressive stack
  • Spot format allows higher active concentrations safely
  • Long lifespan from the small-application-area design
  • Fair value compared to Western multi-active spot treatments
Cons
  • Not for sensitive or rosacea-prone skin
  • Not pregnancy safe
  • Slight whitish cast from zinc oxide
  • Faint sulfur scent noticeable up close
  • Ineffective on cystic or deep pimples — surface only
Verdict

Full Review

Sulfur used to be everywhere in acne skincare. For most of the twentieth century, it was one of the core ingredients you'd find in pharmacy acne products — cheap, well-studied, effective at reducing bacteria and flattening pustules. Then in the last couple of decades it quietly disappeared from most modern formulations, partly because of its faint rotten-egg association and partly because fashion moved on to benzoyl peroxide, retinoids, and salicylic acid. The irony is that the evidence for sulfur didn't change. It still works, it still has a century of clinical history supporting its antimicrobial and keratolytic action, and it still pairs well with other acne actives. It's just unfashionable. SKIN1004 bringing it back in the Tea-Trica Spot Cream is unexpected — K-beauty brands rarely reach for old-school Western pharmacy actives — and it's one of the most interesting formulation choices in the entire Tea-Trica line.

The logic of a spot treatment is different from the logic of a daily moisturizer. Because you're applying it to one or two pimples at a time, you can carry much higher concentrations of aggressive actives than would be safe for full-face use. This is the design space SKIN1004 is working in here. Tea tree shows up in three forms — leaf water, extract, and essential oil — with the oil at a meaningfully higher concentration than in the B5 Cream or the ampoule. The published evidence base for tea tree's antimicrobial activity against Cutibacterium acnes is strong, and at the higher localized concentrations that spot treatment tolerates, the antimicrobial action is genuinely on par with low-dose benzoyl peroxide in the relevant clinical trials, though slower to take effect.

Salicylic acid sits higher on the INCI of this cream than it does in the toner or daily moisturizer, which suggests it's carrying a meaningfully higher dose. In spot treatment form, this is actually fine — you're not exposing most of your face to the BHA, and the direct contact with the comedone is exactly what salicylic acid needs to work on pore contents. Sulfur and zinc oxide round out the anti-bacterial and astringent side. Zinc oxide contributes some mild sun-protection and a slight whitish cast that doubles as visual concealment, and sulfur does the kind of drying, anti-microbial work that turns an angry red pustule into a flatter, less inflamed bump overnight. The four actives hit different targets in the same treatment session — bacterial action, keratolytic exfoliation, drying, and astringent effect — which is a broader mechanism profile than most single-active spot treatments.

And then there's the centella layer. All four triterpenes appear on the INCI, which is the same pattern SKIN1004 uses across the Tea-Trica line. In a spot treatment as aggressive as this one, the centella is doing more than making the formula feel nice. Stacking tea tree oil, salicylic acid, and sulfur without any anti-inflammatory buffering is a reliable way to turn a pimple into a post-inflammatory mark that lasts six weeks after the original breakout has resolved. The centella triterpenes' published anti-inflammatory activity is what keeps this spot cream from creating a worse-looking result than it fixes.

On skin, the texture is a lightweight cream with a faint grainy feel from the sulfur and zinc. It applies with a slight whitish cast that can be visible on darker skin tones — this is unavoidable with zinc oxide at this positioning. The scent is mostly neutral, though you can pick up a very faint sulfur note up close. On an active pimple, there's usually a mild tingle from the sulfur and BHA that fades within a minute or two. By the next morning, most whiteheads and shallow pustules are visibly flatter and less red. Deeper or cystic pimples respond much less — this cream is built for surface-level active breakouts, not for the kind of inflammation that sits two millimeters below the skin.

Honest limitations: this isn't for sensitive skin, even as a spot product. The combination of tea tree oil, salicylic acid, and sulfur is too aggressive for reactive types, and eczema-prone users should avoid it entirely. It's not pregnancy-safe because of the BHA and tea tree content, and it's not strictly fungal acne safe because of the triglyceride and fatty alcohol content, though the tea tree and sulfur actives are often considered helpful for malassezia. The whitish cast from the zinc oxide can be visible, especially on deeper skin tones, which is a usability tradeoff. And because the formula is designed for spot application, overusing it across large areas of the face will create more irritation than benefit.

At around $14 for 15ml, the value is good. Spot treatments inherently deliver long lifespans because of the small application area, and 15ml is enough to last most users six months to a year of regular use. Comparable multi-active spot treatments from Western brands (Mario Badescu Drying Lotion being the closest competitor) are priced similarly but with narrower ingredient lists. For oily or combination skin dealing with active whiteheads and pustules, this is one of the more thoughtful spot treatment options available, and the sulfur alone makes it worth considering if you've been stuck in the tea-tree-only loop with most K-beauty spot products.

Formula

Formula

Key Ingredients

The hero actives that drive this product's performance.

Ingredient Function Evidence
Tea Tree (Water, Extract & Oil) The spot-treatment format tolerates a higher tea tree oil concentration than the rest of the Tea-Trica line — delivering strong, localized antimicrobial action directly on active pimples without the irritation of applying it over the full face. well-established
Salicylic Acid A direct leave-on BHA dose targeting the comedone — higher positioning on the INCI than the daily moisturizer because point-application reduces the total skin exposure. well-established
Sulfur An old-school acne treatment active rarely seen in K-beauty products — reduces bacteria, dries out pustules, and pairs naturally with salicylic acid and tea tree for a multi-mechanism spot treatment. well-established
Zinc Oxide Adds mild antimicrobial and astringent action, and gives the cream a slight whitish cast that helps conceal the spot while it's being treated. well-established
Centella Asiatica Full Triterpene Panel The calming layer that makes this aggressive spot treatment tolerable — without it, stacking tea tree oil, salicylic acid, and sulfur in one formula would create a fast track to irritation and mark-making. well-established

Full INCI List · pH 4.5

Melaleuca Alternifolia (Tea Tree) Leaf Water, Centella Asiatica Leaf Water, Propanediol, Niacinamide, Glycerin, 1,2-Hexanediol, Salicylic Acid, Melaleuca Alternifolia (Tea Tree) Leaf Oil, Melaleuca Alternifolia (Tea Tree) Leaf Extract, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, Centella Asiatica Extract, Madecassoside, Asiaticoside, Asiatic Acid, Madecassic Acid, Sulfur, Zinc Oxide, Panthenol, Allantoin, Sodium Hyaluronate, Houttuynia Cordata Extract, Cetearyl Alcohol, Glyceryl Stearate, Xanthan Gum, Arginine, Tromethamine, Carbomer, Ethylhexylglycerin, Disodium EDTA

Product Flags

✓ Fragrance Free✓ Alcohol Free✗ Oil Free✓ Silicone Free✓ Paraben Free✓ Sulfate Free✓ Cruelty Free✓ Vegan✗ Fungal Acne Safe

Potential Irritants

Tea Tree OilSalicylic AcidSulfur

Common Allergens

Tea Tree Oil

Compatibility

Match

Skin Match

Best For

oily combination normal

Works For

dry

Not Ideal For

sensitive

Addresses These Conditions

acne

Use With Caution

sensitivity rosacea

Avoid With

eczema

Routine Step

treatment

Time of Day

AM & PM

Pregnancy Safe

No ✗

Layering Tips

Apply a thin dab directly on active pimples after moisturizer. Avoid spreading across large areas — this is a spot treatment, not an all-over cream.

Results Timeline

Visible reduction in pimple size and redness within 12-24 hours. Best used on active, inflamed spots — doesn't prevent new breakouts.

Pairs Well With

centella-asiaticatea-tree-oilsalicylic-acid

Sample AM Routine

  1. Cleanser
  2. Toner
  3. Serum
  4. Moisturizer
  5. THIS PRODUCT on spots
  6. SPF elsewhere

Sample PM Routine

  1. Double cleanse
  2. Toner
  3. Ampoule
  4. Moisturizer
  5. THIS PRODUCT on spots

Evidence

Evidence

Science & Expert Perspective

The Science

The active stack in this spot cream rests on four well-studied acne categories. Tea tree oil has substantial clinical evidence for antimicrobial activity against Cutibacterium acnes, with published trials showing efficacy in mild-to-moderate inflammatory acne. Salicylic acid has decades of published research supporting its comedolytic activity, particularly at direct contact with comedones. Sulfur is one of the oldest topical acne treatments still in use, with research spanning more than a century supporting its antimicrobial and keratolytic effects at concentrations between 2-10% — it remains listed as an active ingredient in FDA over-the-counter acne drug monographs. Zinc oxide provides mild antimicrobial and astringent activity with documented benefits in acne formulations. The centella triterpene panel — madecassoside, asiaticoside, asiatic acid, and madecassic acid — contributes anti-inflammatory activity that reduces the post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation risk associated with aggressive acne treatment. The overall formulation strategy of stacking multiple low-to-moderate concentration actives rather than relying on a single high-concentration active reflects a well-established approach to spot treatment that maximizes efficacy while spreading the irritation burden across multiple mechanisms.

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists continue to prescribe sulfur-containing formulations for mild-to-moderate inflammatory acne, particularly for patients who cannot tolerate benzoyl peroxide. Board-certified dermatologists note that sulfur remains a legitimate acne active with substantial historical and ongoing clinical support, despite its fall from fashion in mass-market products. Multi-mechanism spot treatments combining sulfur with salicylic acid and plant antimicrobials are commonly suggested for patients who want a non-prescription option for active breakouts. Patients with sensitive skin, rosacea, or eczema are generally advised to use gentler spot treatments or stick to plain hydrocolloid patches.

Guidance

How To

Usage Guide

How to Use

Apply a small dab directly on active pimples after moisturizer. Do not spread across large areas — this is a spot product and will over-dry if used all-over. Use twice daily or as needed on active breakouts. For overnight treatment, apply after your full routine and leave on. In the morning, follow with sunscreen over any spots where the cream has been applied. Do not use on broken or severely inflamed skin.

Value Assessment

At around $14 for 15ml, this spot cream offers strong value. Comparable multi-active spot treatments from Western brands like Mario Badescu Drying Lotion run $17-20 at similar sizes with narrower ingredient lists. The small tube inherently lasts a long time because spot treatment application uses minimal product — most users will get 6-12 months out of a single tube. The per-use cost is negligible, making this an easy addition to an acne-focused routine.

Who Should Buy

Oily, combination, or normal skin dealing with occasional active whiteheads, pustules, or surfaced breakouts looking for a multi-mechanism spot treatment. Also a good complement to the rest of the Tea-Trica routine for anyone already invested in the line.

Who Should Skip

Sensitive, rosacea-prone, or eczema-prone skin. Anyone pregnant. If your primary acne is cystic or deep, this cream won't do much — see a dermatologist for prescription treatment instead.

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Details

Product

Details

Texture

Lightweight cream with a slight grainy feel from sulfur and zinc

Scent

Faint tea tree and mild sulfur note

Packaging

Small plastic squeeze tube

Finish

mattenon-greasy

What to Expect on First Use

Apply a small dab. Slight tingle is normal on active spots. Visible flattening usually within 12 hours of overnight use.

How Long It Lasts

6-12 months depending on frequency — it's a spot treatment, so a little goes a long way

Period After Opening

12 months

Best Season

All Year

Background

Backstory

The Why

The Tea-Trica Spot Cream finishes the Tea-Trica line as the point-treatment companion to the toner, ampoule, and moisturizer. SKIN1004 used the spot format to carry actives at concentrations that would be too aggressive for full-face application — sulfur in particular is almost never used in daily-use Korean products but is well suited to localized treatment.

About SKIN1004 Emerging Brand (2–5 years)

SKIN1004 launched in 2016 around Madagascar centella. The Tea-Trica Spot Cream is the brand's point-treatment product, applying the Tea-Trica active stack at higher concentration for targeted use on active breakouts.

Brand founded: 2016 · Product launched: 2023

Myth vs. Reality

Myths

Myths & Misconceptions

Myth

Sulfur is an outdated acne treatment with no real evidence

Reality

Sulfur has been used for acne for over a century, and published research continues to support its antimicrobial and keratolytic action at concentrations between 2-10%. It fell out of fashion because of its scent, not its effectiveness, and it remains a legitimately useful active for spot treatment.

FAQ

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How is this different from the Tea-Trica B5 Cream?

The B5 Cream is an all-over daily moisturizer with a gentler active load. The Spot Cream is a point treatment with higher concentrations of tea tree, salicylic acid, and sulfur added. Apply the B5 Cream across the face and use the Spot Cream directly on active pimples.

Is the Tea-Trica Spot Cream pregnancy safe?

No — it contains salicylic acid and tea tree oil. While the spot application limits total exposure, most dermatologists still recommend avoiding these during pregnancy. Use a plain hydrocolloid patch instead.

Can I use it with retinol or benzoyl peroxide?

Yes, but apply the spot cream after your treatment products have absorbed. Don't layer it directly on top of wet benzoyl peroxide or retinol — wait a few minutes so the products don't interact on skin. Also avoid using on skin that's already raw from overuse of other actives.

Does sulfur really work on acne?

Yes — sulfur has been used as a topical acne treatment for over a century and has published research supporting its antimicrobial and keratolytic activity. It's less fashionable than it once was because of the faint scent, but it's a legitimately useful active, particularly in spot format.

Is it fungal acne safe?

Not strictly. It contains caprylic/capric triglyceride and cetearyl alcohol, which some fungal acne routines exclude. The tea tree and sulfur actives are often considered helpful against malassezia, so the answer is mixed depending on your specific tolerance.

Community

Community

Community Voices

Common Praise

"Shrinks active pimples overnight"

"Less drying than benzoyl peroxide spot treatments"

"Small tube is practical"

Common Complaints

"Faint sulfur scent noticeable up close"

"Not for sensitive skin even as a spot product"

"Slight whitish cast can be visible"

Appears In

best acne spot treatment best tea tree spot cream best sulfur spot treatment best k beauty pimple cream

Related Conditions

acne

Related Ingredients

tea tree salicylic acid sulfur zinc centella asiatica

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