Hydration Is the Infrastructure, Not the Finish
Before K-Beauty gave the world glass skin as an aesthetic, it gave the world glass skin as a methodology - skin so consistently well-hydrated that texture and luminosity follow almost automatically. That methodology begins with hyaluronic acid (HA).
HA is a polysaccharide - a long-chain sugar molecule - that occurs naturally throughout the body, with the highest concentration in skin tissue. Its job is to bind and retain water: one gram can hold up to six litres of it. As a structural component of healthy skin, it maintains the suppleness, volume, and resilience that reads as youth. The problem is that natural HA levels decline steadily from your mid-twenties, dropping by as much as 75% by age 75. Topical application doesn't replace what's lost in the dermis, but it does restore hydration at the epidermal level - and that difference is visible.
This isn't a trending ingredient. It's foundational. What has evolved is how we use it.
Molecular Weight Is the Only Spec That Matters
For years, HA was sold on concentration. "2% hyaluronic acid" appeared on labels as if the number alone guaranteed results. It doesn't. What determines how a hyaluronic acid product actually behaves on skin is molecular weight - the physical size of the molecule, which dictates how deep it can penetrate.
High molecular weight HA (HMW) is too large to pass through the skin barrier. It sits on the surface and forms a lightweight, breathable film that immediately reduces water loss and creates the "plump" sensation you notice within minutes of application. It's the instant-gratification layer.
Medium molecular weight HA (MMW) reaches the outer layers of the epidermis, where it smooths the micro-texture of skin over time. This is the layer most responsible for the softening effect associated with consistent HA use.
Low molecular weight HA (LMW) penetrates further - into the deeper epidermis - delivering sustained hydration at the cellular level. It's slower to show results than HMW, but the effects last considerably longer.
Apply It Wrong and It Works Against You
Hyaluronic acid is a humectant - it attracts water. That's the mechanism that makes it effective, and it's also where most people go wrong.
Applied to completely dry skin in a low-humidity environment, HA will pull from the deeper layers of your skin instead of the surface - increasing transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and leaving skin drier a few hours after application.
No - the name is misleading. Hyaluronic acid is a polysaccharide, not an AHA or BHA. It doesn't exfoliate, dissolve dead skin, or change skin pH. It is one of the gentlest ingredients in skincare and appropriate for all skin types, including sensitive and acne-prone.

