Collection: Hyperpigmentation Solutions; For Your Pigmentation Concerns

98 products

Hyperpigmentation Solutions Price in Pakistan — Serums & Treatments

One hundred and nineteen products. Rs. 140 to Rs. 14,499. Highfy.pk's hyperpigmentation collection covers every angle on dark marks: Vitamin C serums, niacinamide, mandelic acid, tranexamic acid, kojic acid, azelaic acid, arbutin — local brands like Jenpharm and Saeed Ghani alongside Korean options from Axis-Y, Anua, and Beauty of Joseon. Eight representative products below, selected across the Rs. 1,099 to Rs. 5,519 range where the real decisions happen. All available on Highfy.pk, nationwide delivery 48 to 72 hours, 7-day return policy. Code HIYOU for free delivery on your first order.

Product Size Price
Garnier Bright Complete Vitamin C Serum 15ml Rs. 1,099
Jenpharm Mandelac Serum 3-in-1 30ml Rs. 1,598
Jenpharm Maxdif Brightening Serum 30ml Rs. 1,998
Himalaya Dark Spot Clearing Turmeric Serum 30ml Rs. 2,300
Rederm Wynn Brightening & Depigmentation Serum PC Rs. 2,360
Axis-Y Dark Spot Correcting Glow Serum 50ml Rs. 3,999
Beauty of Joseon Glow Deep Serum Rice + Arbutin 30ml Rs. 4,309
Anua Niacinamide 10% + TXA 4% Dark Spot Serum 30ml Rs. 5,519

Dark Marks Aren't All the Same — and That Matters Before You Buy

Post-acne marks, sun damage, and melasma respond to different ingredients. Buying the wrong one wastes 8 to 12 weeks and Rs. 1,500 to Rs. 5,000. Post-acne hyperpigmentation — the flat brown or red mark left after a pimple clears — responds well to niacinamide, mandelic acid, and azelaic acid. Sun-damage dark spots from years of Karachi or Lahore UV exposure need stronger melanin-inhibiting actives: kojic acid, arbutin, Vitamin C, tranexamic acid. Melasma is the most stubborn of the three — it's hormonally driven and will come back with sun exposure regardless of which treatment you're using, so daily SPF is non-negotiable alongside any serum.

Most Pakistani women are dealing with post-acne PIH rather than melasma, but the two are frequently confused because they look similar on warm-toned skin. PIH sits in the epidermis and fades with consistent treatment in 8 to 16 weeks. Melasma goes deeper into the dermis and takes 6 to 12 months minimum with the right protocol. If your marks are symmetrical, appear on both sides of the face in the same pattern, and get noticeably worse in summer — that's likely melasma, not regular PIH.

Vitamin C and Niacinamide — the Accessible Starting Point

Garnier Bright Complete Vitamin C Serum 15ml — Rs. 1,099

Garnier's Vitamin C serum is the entry point most Pakistani dermatologists would feel comfortable recommending as a first brightening serum. The Vitamin C concentration isn't stated on Pakistani packaging — going by the formula position in the ingredient list, it's probably 5% to 7%, which is active enough to inhibit melanin without the irritation risk that higher concentrations carry on sensitive or acne-prone skin. At Rs. 1,099 for 15ml it'll last 6 to 7 weeks at one pump daily. Not a fast result: most users won't notice visible fading until week 6 or 7, sometimes closer to week 10 on deeper marks.

Jenpharm Mandelac Serum 3-in-1 30ml — Rs. 1,598

Jenpharm is a Pakistani clinical skincare brand — genuinely clinical, not just a local name slapped on an imported product. Mandelac's active is mandelic acid, an alpha-hydroxy acid derived from bitter almonds. Mandelic acid has a larger molecular size than glycolic acid, which means it penetrates the skin more slowly and causes less irritation — a real advantage for the darker Pakistani skin tones where AHAs can cause post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation if they irritate. The 3-in-1 formula also includes kojic acid and niacinamide alongside the mandelic base. At Rs. 1,598 for 30ml, it's a better value than Garnier if your concern is specifically PIH and your skin is too sensitive for glycolic-based treatments.

Mid-Range — Jenpharm Maxdif and Rederm Wynn

Two Pakistani clinical serums in the Rs. 2,000 range — and for this specific concern, local clinical brands outperform many imported drugstore options at twice the price.

Jenpharm Maxdif at Rs. 1,998 uses 4-n-butylresorcinol as its primary melanin inhibitor — a depigmenting agent with better research behind it than kojic acid alone, and less irritating than high-dose Vitamin C. The Rederm Wynn Brightening Serum at Rs. 2,360 takes a different approach: a combination of tranexamic acid and other depigmenting actives that's aimed more specifically at melasma than general brightening. Exact TXA concentration isn't published by Rederm for either product, which makes it hard to compare directly with the Anua TXA serum at Rs. 5,519. But the Rederm is worth trying before committing to the Rs. 5,000 Korean option — the result difference may not justify the Rs. 3,159 gap.

Korean Serums — Axis-Y, Beauty of Joseon, Anua

All three K-beauty options in this collection target melanin differently, and the price differences between them aren't arbitrary.

Axis-Y Dark Spot Correcting Glow Serum at Rs. 3,999 for 50ml is the best volume value — 50ml is a generous size for a serum, and the formula combines multiple brightening actives at concentrations Korean brands actually publish. Beauty of Joseon Glow Deep Serum at Rs. 4,309 uses rice extract and arbutin — arbutin is a stabilised form of hydroquinone that inhibits tyrosinase without the safety concerns that prescription hydroquinone carries. And then there's Anua's Niacinamide 10% + TXA 4% at Rs. 5,519 — probably the most clinically targeted option here. 10% niacinamide is the research-validated concentration for reducing PIH, and 4% TXA addresses melanin transfer specifically. But Rs. 5,519 for 30ml is a significant spend on a serum that Jenpharm Maxdif at Rs. 1,998 may partially replicate, depending on your skin and the depth of the pigmentation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Which serum is best for hyperpigmentation in Pakistan?

A: It depends on the type of pigmentation and your budget. For post-acne marks on sensitive skin: Jenpharm Mandelac Serum at Rs. 1,598 is the most sensible starting point — mandelic acid is gentler than glycolic and less irritating on darker Pakistani skin tones. For sun-damage dark spots: Jenpharm Maxdif at Rs. 1,998 or Axis-Y at Rs. 3,999. For melasma: Anua Niacinamide 10% + TXA 4% at Rs. 5,519 is the most targeted option in this collection, but combine it with daily SPF 50 — without sun protection, any brightening serum will show minimal progress.

Q: How long does it take for hyperpigmentation to fade in Pakistan?

A: Longer than most people expect and shorter than they fear, honestly. Post-acne PIH on Pakistani skin typically takes 8 to 16 weeks of consistent daily use to show visible fading — not 2 to 3 weeks as many product claims imply. Sun-damage spots take longer: 12 to 24 weeks depending on depth and your SPF habits. Melasma is the slowest — 6 to 12 months with the right treatment and strict sun avoidance, and it can return in summer regardless. Most people quit their brightening serum around week 6 when they don't see results — that's usually just before the product starts working.

Q: Is Jenpharm good for hyperpigmentation?

A: Yes — Jenpharm is one of the better Pakistani clinical skincare brands for this concern. Their Mandelac range uses mandelic acid which is well-tolerated on melanin-rich skin, and the Maxdif serum uses 4-n-butylresorcinol which has stronger depigmenting evidence than basic kojic acid or Vitamin C alone. Both are available on Highfy.pk — Mandelac Serum at Rs. 1,598, Maxdif at Rs. 1,998. Results vary by skin type and how deep the pigmentation sits, but they're clinically formulated products from a local brand that dermatologists in Pakistan actually recommend.