Answer
Fungal acne is not actually acne. It is a yeast-related infection of the hair follicles, usually caused by an overgrowth of Malassezia yeast. It often appears as small, itchy, uniform bumps that do not respond to regular acne treatments.
Summary
If you have tried cleanser after cleanser, swapped moisturizers, cut out certain foods, and added new serums, but those stubborn bumps still will not budge, the issue may not be traditional acne at all. It could be fungal acne, also known as Malassezia folliculitis. In this article, I will break down what fungal acne is, how it differs from bacterial or hormonal acne, what causes it, and which fungal acne treatments may actually help. Understanding the difference is the first step toward finally giving your skin what it actually needs.
Expert Notes
As beauty editor Barbie Ritzman of Barbie’s Beauty Bits, I have seen how frustrating it can be when someone keeps treating their skin for acne, but nothing changes. One of the biggest “aha” moments is realizing that not every breakout is caused by clogged pores, bacteria, or hormones. I always tell readers that if your bumps are itchy, clustered, and resistant to standard acne products, it may be time to look beyond regular acne and consider whether fungal acne could be part of the problem.
What Is Fungal Acne?
Fungal acne, medically known as Malassezia folliculitis or Pityrosporum folliculitis, is not a true form of acne. It is a fungal infection of the hair follicles caused by an overgrowth of Malassezia yeast, a type of yeast that naturally lives on the surface of everyone’s skin as part of the skin’s normal flora.
Under normal conditions, Malassezia is harmless. But when the balance of yeast on your skin is disrupted, it can overgrow, invade the hair follicles, and trigger inflammation. The result looks like acne, but it does not respond to standard acne treatments because the root cause is entirely different.
This is why I think fungal acne is so important to understand. So many people spend months treating what they believe is bacterial or hormonal acne and see no improvement. The wrong treatment does nothing for a fungal infection and, in some cases, can make it worse.
How Can You Tell If You Have Fungal Acne?
Fungal acne has distinct characteristics that set it apart from other types of breakouts.
Location: Fungal acne most commonly appears on the forehead, hairline, chest, back, neck, shoulders, and arms. Because it is tied to hair follicles, it can technically appear anywhere follicles exist.
Appearance: The bumps are typically small, uniform in size and shape, and often appear in clusters. They may look more like a rash than traditional pimples and are frequently filled with pus.
Itchiness: One of the clearest signs of fungal acne is that the bumps itch and sometimes burn. Regular hormonal or bacterial acne rarely causes this type of sensation.
Lack of response to acne treatments: If your breakouts have not improved with standard acne products, including salicylic acid, benzoyl peroxide, or retinoids, a fungal infection may be what you are actually dealing with. From my perspective, this is where people often get stuck. They keep adding more acne products when the skin may actually need a completely different approach.
What Causes Fungal Acne?
Several factors can tip the balance of Malassezia yeast and set off a breakout.
Heat and moisture: Warm, damp environments are where fungal infections thrive. Excessive sweating, humid climates, and leaving workout clothes on for extended periods all create the conditions that allow yeast to overgrow on the skin’s surface.
Antibiotic use: This is one of the more counterintuitive causes. Antibiotics prescribed for bacterial acne reduce the bacteria on the skin, but this can inadvertently allow fungus to overgrow unchecked. Someone who goes on a long course of antibiotics and starts breaking out differently may be experiencing a fungal rebound.
Weakened immune system or underlying health conditions: People with diabetes or compromised immunity are more susceptible to fungal infections, including Malassezia folliculitis.
Age and hormone-driven oil production: Adolescents, particularly males, are more commonly affected because higher oil production during this stage of life creates an environment where yeast can flourish more easily.
I know it can feel confusing because some of these triggers overlap with regular acne. Sweat, oil, and hormones can all play a role, but with fungal acne, the yeast overgrowth is the real issue.
How Is Fungal Acne Different from Bacterial and Hormonal Acne?
Bacterial acne is caused by an overgrowth of acne-causing bacteria in the pores. It often presents as cysts, larger pimples, and inflamed lesions.
Hormonal acne is driven by fluctuations in estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone, which can cause the sebaceous glands to overproduce sebum. This can clog pores and create deeper blemishes, typically along the jawline and chin. Hormonal shifts during puberty, menstrual cycles, pregnancy, perimenopause, and menopause can all play a role in these types of breakouts.
Fungal acne is different because it is driven by yeast, not bacteria or hormones. It tends to be smaller, more uniform, itchier, and located higher on the face or on the body.
A dermatologist can confirm the diagnosis by taking a skin scraping and examining it for yeast under a microscope, which removes the guesswork.
It is also possible to have more than one type of acne at the same time. That is why I always believe professional guidance can be genuinely helpful when breakouts are persistent, confusing, or not responding the way you expected.
What Fungal Acne Treatment Actually Works?
Effective fungal acne treatment targets the yeast overgrowth directly rather than bacteria or excess oil. Antifungal medication: Topical antifungal creams or prescription oral antifungals are often the most direct route to clearing a fungal infection. These help reduce the yeast population on the skin and calm the inflamed follicles. A dermatologist can recommend the appropriate strength and form based on the severity of the breakout.
Anti-dandruff shampoo as a cleanser: This sounds unconventional, but it is widely recommended. Shampoos containing pyrithione zinc or selenium sulfide have antifungal properties. Used as a body or face wash on affected areas and left on the skin for a few minutes before rinsing, they can help rebalance the skin’s yeast levels over time.
Non-comedogenic skincare: Switching to products that do not clog pores and do not feed the yeast is essential during treatment. Certain oils and fatty acids found in common skincare products can actually fuel Malassezia growth. Using non-comedogenic, fungal-acne-safe products removes one of the key things feeding the infection.
Cleansing after sweating: Because heat and moisture drive yeast overgrowth, washing your skin promptly after workouts or any heavy perspiration significantly reduces the window in which the infection can worsen.
Dietary adjustments: Fungi feed on sugar and refined carbohydrates. Reducing the intake of these foods during an active breakout may help slow the yeast overgrowth from the inside.
This is also where I would be careful about overdoing harsh acne products. If the issue is fungal, piling on stronger acne treatments may only leave your skin irritated without addressing the real cause.
How Can You Prevent Fungal Acne from Coming Back?
Once a fungal breakout clears, the goal shifts to keeping the conditions that triggered it from recurring.
Wearing breathable, loose-fitting clothing, especially cotton, helps the skin breathe and reduces moisture buildup. Changing out of sweaty gym clothes immediately after exercise rather than sitting in them is one of the simplest and most effective preventive steps.
Avoiding skincare and haircare products that contain ingredients known to feed Malassezia, particularly certain esters and fatty acids, helps create a less hospitable environment for yeast overgrowth.
Maintaining a consistent skincare routine with clean, non-comedogenic products also makes a significant difference in keeping the skin’s microbiome balanced long-term.
For me, prevention really comes down to paying attention to patterns. If your breakouts flare after sweating, humidity, heavy products, or certain skincare formulas, that is your skin giving you clues.
The Bottom Line
Fungal acne is one of the most commonly misdiagnosed skin conditions, and that misdiagnosis is exactly why so many people spend months or years treating it ineffectively. Once you understand what it actually is and what drives it, the path to clearer skin becomes much more straightforward.
If your breakouts are itchy, clustered, and resistant to everything you have tried, fungal acne is worth investigating. The right diagnosis paired with the right fungal acne treatment can make all the difference.
About the Author
Barbie Ritzman is the founder of
Barbie’s Beauty Bits and an award-winning beauty editor covering
skincare, cosmetic procedures, aesthetic treatments, and beauty and
fashion. She works directly with medical spas, aestheticians, cosmetic
practices, and beauty brands as a content strategist and beauty
marketing expert, giving her a behind-the-scenes understanding of the
industry most beauty writers don’t have.
That inside access means she brings a perspective that goes
beyond the brochure: the real experience, the real results, and
sometimes the real complications.
Featured in the Daily Mail, Vogue, CBS, ABC, Bold Magazine, Entrepreneur Magazine, and many others. Recognized as Lux Magazine Beauty Influencer of the Year, Top 100 Beauty Blog 2026,Best Beauty and Skincare Content Marketing Blog USA, Nextdoor Neighborhood Fave, and expert co-author on WikiHow.