These three words all describe the same basic stuff — just at bigger and bigger sizes. Once you've got the order straight, almost every peptide skincare claim gets easier to judge.
The three sizes
| Word | Size | Everyday picture |
|---|---|---|
| Amino acid | A single little building block | One bead |
| Peptide | About 2 to 50 amino acids | A short string of beads |
| Protein | Dozens to thousands, folded up | A long string folded into a shape |
Why size changes how they act
The outer layer of your skin is a barrier — its whole job is to keep stuff out. As a rough rule, smaller things have an easier time working with the skin's surface than really big ones do. That's one reason skincare makers like short peptides more than whole proteins: a big protein like collagen sitting on top of your skin acts very differently from a small peptide chain.
Amino acids in skincare
Amino acids show up in skincare on their own too. They're part of your skin's natural moisturising factor (NMF) — the mix of small bits that helps the outer layer hold on to water. So you'll see amino acids advertised for a hydrated, comfy feel. That's a different job from the messaging story people tell about peptides.
How this helps you read a label
- If a product makes a big deal of amino acids, think hydration and a comfy skin feel.
- If it names specific peptides (chains like Palmitoyl Tripeptide-1), it's leaning on the messaging story — so check what it actually promises.
- If it pushes collagen or other big proteins, expect surface hydration and a smooth film, not deep changes.
What it can claim
- Amino acids can be described as helping skin feel hydrated and comfortable
- Peptides can be described as ingredients studied for how skin looks
- Proteins like collagen can be described as film-forming ingredients that add water on the surface
What it can’t claim
- Collagen on the skin cannot be described as rebuilding your own collagen
- None of these can be described as a medical treatment when they're in skincare
- "Small molecule" cannot be treated as proof that it soaks in or that it works
What this does not mean
- This does not mean smaller is always better — whether something soaks in depends on the exact molecule and the product it's in, not just size.
- This does not mean proteins on your skin are useless; adding water at the surface is a real and useful skincare benefit.