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ECZEMASKIN BARRIERSKIN SCIENCE

8 Natural Skincare Treatments for Eczema That Actually Repair Your Skin Barrier

By Line · April 16, 2026 · 13 min read · Last updated April 16, 2026

Your skin was fine for decades. Then somewhere around 45, it wasn't. Patches of dry, itchy, inflamed skin appeared out of nowhere, and nothing in your medicine cabinet seemed to help. If you're searching for an eczema natural skincare treatment that actually works for skin over 40, you're not alone. And you're not imagining things.

In a UK study of over 700 women, 25% developed eczema for the first time during menopause. Two-thirds reported flares coinciding with the onset of hormonal changes. Declining estrogen reduces your skin's ceramide production and natural moisturizing factors, increasing transepidermal water loss (TEWL). Your barrier isn't just dry. It's structurally compromised.

Most conventional eczema advice targets younger skin or children. "Moisturize more" doesn't cut it when the problem is a depleted lipid matrix. What your skin needs are treatments that replenish the specific lipids it's lost: ceramides, essential fatty acids, and cholesterol.

These eight treatments target that deficiency using plant-based ingredients backed by clinical research. Each one addresses a specific mechanism, from barrier lipid replacement to inflammatory pathway inhibition to antimicrobial defense against the bacteria that colonize eczema skin.

No gimmicks, no 12-step routines. Three to four products, applied correctly, will outperform a 10-product routine applied carelessly. Every treatment includes specific guidance on how, when, and why to use it for skin over 40.

25%
Women who develop eczema for the first time during menopause. UK study, 700+ women
60%
Linoleic acid content in sunflower seed oil - rebuilds ceramide EOS in the skin barrier. PMC research
23%+
GLA (gamma-linolenic acid) in borage oil - highest of any plant oil, 2–3x evening primrose. PubMed
90%
Eczema skin colonized by S. aureus bacteria, a major trigger for flares. Clinical data
Eczema Natural Skincare Treatment - 8 plant-based remedies that repair the skin barrier

1. Sunflower Seed Oil Rebuilds Your Lipid Barrier From the Inside Out

Eczema skin is measurably deficient in three specific lipids: ceramides, linoleic acid, and cholesterol. Most moisturizers don't address any of them. Sunflower seed oil directly supplies one of the three, and it's the one your skin can use to build the others.

Sunflower oil is roughly 60% linoleic acid. When applied topically, linoleic acid activates PPAR-alpha receptors in the stratum corneum, triggering conversion to ceramide EOS, one of the key structural lipids in your skin barrier. It doesn't sit on the surface. It physically rebuilds the lipid bilayer that estrogen decline has thinned.

As Vidya from Oleum Cottage explains: "Most creams are emulsions which is water plus oil. And in many formulations, the lipid concentration is extremely low. So you're really hydrating, but you're not restoring enough fatty acids to rebuild this lipid matrix. Think of it like repairing cracked cement. Spraying water on it won't really just fix it. You need structural material."

One important note: it must be cold-pressed and unrefined. The sunflower oil in your kitchen pantry has been refined at high temperatures, stripping the linoleic acid content. Apply it to damp skin after washing for best absorption. More on that technique in section 7.

The verdict: Sunflower seed oil is the foundational oil for eczema barrier repair, especially for women whose lipid barrier has thinned with hormonal changes. Start here.

2. Borage Oil Delivers the Strongest Anti-Inflammatory Fatty Acid in Any Plant

Most plant oils moisturize. Borage oil does something different. It produces an anti-inflammatory compound directly inside your skin cells.

Borage oil contains the highest concentration of gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) of any plant oil, at 23% or more. That's two to three times the GLA in evening primrose oil, which gets far more attention. Once absorbed, GLA converts to DGLA (dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid), then to prostaglandin PGE1, a direct anti-inflammatory signaling molecule. This isn't surface-level soothing. It's intervening in the inflammatory cascade at the cellular level.

Why does this matter specifically after 40? Declining estrogen increases systemic inflammation throughout the body, and your skin feels it. Borage oil works on the local inflammatory pathway in the skin itself, not just surface moisture.

In practice, borage oil blends well with sunflower oil. You get barrier repair from the linoleic acid and inflammation control from the GLA in one application. It absorbs cleanly enough for morning use without the heavy, greasy feel that makes coconut oil impractical during the day.

One practical note: GLA oxidizes faster than most fatty acids. Store borage oil in a dark glass bottle, refrigerated, and use it within three months of opening. Rancid oil does more harm than good on compromised skin.

Quick comparison: If you've been using evening primrose oil and finding it helpful but not quite enough, borage oil delivers the same mechanism with two to three times the active concentration. It's the more efficient choice for daily eczema natural skincare treatment.

3. Sea Buckthorn Oil Targets the Inflammation Pathways Behind Eczema Flares

You've been gentle with your skin. You've moisturized religiously. But the flares keep coming back, because moisture alone doesn't address what's driving them.

Sea buckthorn oil works deeper than the barrier. It inhibits NF-kB and STAT1, two transcription factors that drive the Th2 inflammatory response responsible for eczema flares. This is the same pathway that prescription biologics target, but through a plant compound rather than a pharmaceutical one. A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 49 patients taking 5g per day of sea buckthorn for four months showed significant improvement in eczema symptoms compared to placebo.

Sea buckthorn also contains omega-7 (palmitoleic acid), which is rare among plant oils. Omega-7 supports mucosal and skin tissue repair, making it particularly useful for the thin, fragile skin that develops during perimenopause. It also accelerates wound healing, which matters when scratch damage from nighttime itching compounds your barrier breakdown.

There's a reason this plant thrives in the harshest Arctic and Nordic climates. It produces an extraordinarily dense nutrient profile as a survival mechanism, with hundreds of bioactive compounds packed into a small, bright orange berry. It's one of the reasons we built our formulations around it at Frøya.

Best for: Women dealing with recurring inflammatory flares that don't respond to moisturizing alone. Skip if: You're only experiencing mild dryness without redness or itch. Sunflower oil alone may be enough.

4. Colloidal Oatmeal Calms Itch and Seals Moisture in One Step

The worst part of eczema isn't how it looks. It's the itch that wakes you at 2 a.m. and the scratching you do before you're even conscious.

Colloidal oatmeal contains avenanthramides, polyphenols unique to oats that inhibit NF-kB, reducing inflammation and itch signaling at the cellular level. In clinical studies, avenanthramides reduced itch intensity within 15 to 30 minutes of application. Separately, beta-glucans in oats form a thin, breathable film on the skin surface that physically seals moisture in. You get itch relief and barrier protection from one ingredient.

Colloidal oatmeal is one of the very few natural ingredients with FDA-approved skin protectant status. That designation requires controlled clinical evidence of both safety and efficacy, not just traditional use claims. The evidence bar is high, and oatmeal cleared it.

How to use it effectively: lukewarm oatmeal baths for 10 to 15 minutes, or oatmeal-based balms applied after bathing. The water temperature matters. Hot water strips whatever barrier lipids your skin still has. Stay lukewarm, soak, then apply your oil within three minutes of patting skin damp. This pairs directly with the soak-and-seal method in section 7.

Direct recommendation: Colloidal oatmeal is your go-to for acute itch relief, especially as an evening soak before the oil-sealing step. It's the treatment that makes all the other treatments work better.

5. The Right Facial Cleanser Stops Eczema Before Your Routine Even Starts

32% of menopausal women with eczema experience it on their face. And the product most likely sabotaging their skin isn't a treatment. It's their cleanser.

Facial cleansers for eczema-prone skin need to meet three criteria: pH 4.5 to 5.5 (matching the skin's acid mantle), fragrance-free, and non-foaming. Foaming agents like SLS and SLES strip barrier lipids with every wash. The problem is that most cleansers marketed as "gentle" still foam. That lather feels like it's working. It is. It's working against you.

Why pH matters: your acid mantle sits between 4.5 and 5.5. Cleansers above pH 7 (most foaming cleansers) disrupt this protective layer, increasing TEWL for up to six hours after a single wash. On already-compromised eczema skin, that's a daily self-inflicted wound.

Oil-based or micellar cleansers remove impurities without disrupting the lipid barrier. Vanicream Gentle Facial Cleanser and CeraVe Hydrating Cleanser are solid, accessible options. Waterless cleansing balms are even better for eczema-prone facial skin. Avoid double-cleansing routines. Two rounds of even a gentle cleanser can strip what one round preserved.

Many women over 45 layer retinol, AHAs, or vitamin C serums to address aging concerns on top of a barrier that's already compromised. Every active in that routine accelerates cell turnover on skin that can't keep up. The cleanser is the first place to simplify.

The verdict: Your cleanser should be the most boring product in your routine. If it foams, fragrances, or tingles, it's working against your eczema natural skincare treatment, not with it.

6. Coconut Oil Fights the Bacteria That Trigger Eczema Flares

You've probably already tried coconut oil. Maybe it helped a little. Maybe it felt too greasy and you gave up. The issue isn't coconut oil itself. It's how and when you use it.

The real value of coconut oil for eczema isn't moisture. It's antimicrobial. Lauric acid, which makes up roughly 50% of coconut oil's fatty acids, converts to monolaurin in the body. Monolaurin has demonstrated direct antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus, the bacterium that colonizes up to 90% of eczema skin and is a major trigger for flares. Addressing this microbial component is something most moisturizers can't do.

Two non-negotiables: it must be cold-pressed and virgin. Refined coconut oil has reduced lauric acid content and may contain processing residues that irritate sensitive skin. The antimicrobial benefit depends on an intact fatty acid profile.

As Dr. Selma Tobani, an allergist, notes: "Oils are actually great sealants, but they don't have all three properties [humectant, emollient, occlusive] [...] sequencing matters." Coconut oil is greasy and impractical for daytime facial use. It works best as a nighttime treatment on body eczema patches, where the greasiness becomes an advantage, creating a sustained occlusive seal while you sleep.

Best for: Nighttime body application on active patches where bacterial colonization may be driving flares. Skip if: You need something for your face or daytime use. Lighter oils like sunflower and borage blends are more practical.

7. The Soak-and-Seal Method Turns Any Oil Into a Better Treatment

The same oil, applied two different ways, can either repair your barrier or barely do anything. The difference is three minutes.

The soak-and-seal method is straightforward. Bathe or wash with lukewarm water (never hot). Pat your skin until it's just damp, not dry. Apply your oil or balm within three minutes. The water absorbed into the stratum corneum gets trapped beneath the lipid or occlusive layer, creating a sustained hydration reservoir that lasts for hours. Miss that three-minute window and the water evaporates, taking some of your skin's remaining moisture with it.

This is also why humectants alone can backfire. Ingredients like glycerin and hyaluronic acid pull moisture from the environment. In air-conditioned offices, heated rooms, or dry indoor air below 40% humidity, they pull water out of your skin instead. An occlusive lipid seal on top (plant oils, balms) prevents this. Without that seal, your humectant-based moisturizer may be making things worse.

A simple routine built around eczema natural skincare treatment principles:

Morning: Non-foaming cleanser on damp skin. Pat until just damp. Sunflower and borage oil blend. Done.

Evening: Lukewarm oatmeal soak (10 to 15 minutes). Pat damp. Sea buckthorn or coconut oil on active patches. Light balm seal over everything.

Total products: three to four. Not 10.

Direct recommendation: This method is the single change that makes every other treatment on this list more effective. Start here before adding anything new.
Frøya Organics

Hyper Fast Eczema & Psoriasis Stopper

Sea buckthorn, borage, and rosehip - cold-pressed. No water, no fillers, no steroids. Built for skin that needs structural repair.

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8. What to Stop Using If You Have Eczema After 40

Sometimes the most effective treatment is the product you stop using. If your eczema appeared alongside your anti-aging routine, that's probably not a coincidence.

Retinol and AHAs accelerate cell turnover in skin that's already struggling to maintain its barrier. They're effective anti-aging ingredients on healthy skin. On eczema-compromised skin, they create more damage than the skin can repair. Pause them entirely during active flares.

Essential oils versus cold-pressed plant oils. This distinction matters. Essential oils (tea tree, lavender, peppermint) are concentrated volatile compounds extracted via high heat or steam distillation. They can sensitize eczema skin and trigger contact dermatitis. Cold-pressed plant oils (sunflower, borage, sea buckthorn) are fatty acid-rich and non-volatile. Despite both being called "oils," they're completely different categories. One calms your skin. The other can set it on fire.

Fragrance, even "natural" fragrance. Fragrance compounds are among the top contact allergens identified by dermatologists. "Naturally scented" and "essential oil-infused" products are not safer for eczema skin. Look specifically for "fragrance-free," not "unscented." Unscented products may contain masking fragrances that still cause reactions.

As Dr. Rey, a board-certified dermatologist, explains: hormonal decline during perimenopause and menopause results in loss of collagen, elastin, and barrier function. When estrogen, testosterone, and progesterone shift, your skin barrier is no longer as functional as it once was.

The verdict: Simplify ruthlessly. If a product tingles, smells nice, or promises anti-aging results, set it aside until your barrier is rebuilt. You can reintroduce actives later. Your barrier comes first.

Sea buckthorn, borage, and rosehip - three of the oils in this list - are the core ingredients in our Eczema & Psoriasis Stopper at Frøya Organics. Waterless, cold-pressed, no fillers or steroids. Built specifically for skin that needs barrier repair, not a longer ingredients list.

Shop the Eczema Stopper →

Frequently Asked Questions

Können natürliche Öle Steroid-Cremes bei Ekzemen ersetzen?+
Nicht als direkter Austausch. Natürliche Öle wirken auf Hautbarrieren-Reparatur und Entzündung durch andere Mechanismen als topische Steroide, die die Immunreaktion während akuter Schübe unterdrücken. Was Öle tun können, ist, die Häufigkeit von Schüben im Laufe der Zeit durch Aufrechterhaltung der Hautbarriere-Integrität zu reduzieren, was möglicherweise Ihre Abhängigkeit von Steroiden verringert. Viele Frauen stellen fest, dass sie weniger häufig auf Steroid-Cremes angewiesen sind, sobald ihre tägliche Hautbarrieren-Reparaturroutine konsistent ist. Stoppen Sie niemals verschriebene Behandlungen ohne Rücksprache mit Ihrem Dermatologen. Denken Sie an Öle als tägliche Pflege und Steroide als akute Notfalltherapie.
Warum bekam ich zum ersten Mal in meinen 40ern oder 50ern Ekzem?+
Der sinkende Östrogenspiegel während der Perimenopause und Menopause reduziert die Ceramid- und natürlichen Feuchtigkeitsfaktor-Produktion (NMF), verdünnt die Hornschicht und erhöht den transepidermalen Wasserlust. In einer Studie mit über 700 britischen Frauen entwickelten 25 % zum ersten Mal während der Menopause ein Ekzem. Dies ist nicht zufällig oder etwas, das Sie verursacht haben. Es ist eine hormonelle Verschiebung, die Ihre Hautbarriere strukturell verändert – und es ist häufig genug, dass Dermatologen es jetzt als ein eigenständiges klinisches Muster anerkennen.
Wie lange dauert es, bis natürliche Ekzem-Behandlungen Ergebnisse zeigen?+
Zwei bis vier Wochen konsequente Anwendung für eine sichtbare Barrierenreparatur. Eine Entzündungsreduktion durch Öle wie Borretsch und Sanddorn kann bereits in ein bis zwei Wochen spürbar sein. Der vollständige Umsatz der Hautbarriere dauert ungefähr 28 Tage. Geben Sie einer neuen Routine also mindestens einen vollständigen Zyklus Zeit, bevor Sie ein Urteil fällen. Die Soak-and-Seal-Methode zeigt oft bereits in den ersten Tagen einen spürbaren Komfortanstieg – starten Sie damit, während die Öle ihre langsamere strukturelle Arbeit leisten.
Ist Ringelblume sicher für ekzemalanfällige Haut?+
Ja, und sie gehört zu den sanfteren botanischen Optionen, die verfügbar sind. Ringelblume hat gut dokumentierte entzündungshemmende und wundheilende Eigenschaften und wird häufig in Formulierungen für empfindliche und ekzemalanfällige Haut verwendet. Ringelblumen-infundierte Balsame eignen sich besonders gut als Versiegelungsschritt in der Soak-and-Seal-Methode. Suchen Sie nach Produkten, bei denen Ringelblume in einem Trägeröl wie Sonnenblumenöl infundiert ist, statt als ätherisches Ölextrakt angewendet zu werden, das ein höheres Sensibilisierungsrisiko birgt.
Sollte ich vier bis sechsmal täglich für ein Ekzem moisturisieren?+
Dermatologen empfehlen dies in klinischen Umgebungen, aber es ist für die meisten Frauen im Alltag unrealistisch. Ein praktischerer Ansatz: gründliche Soak-and-Seal-Anwendung morgens und abends, mit einer zusätzlichen Mittagsanwendung bei Problemstellen, falls nötig. Die Qualität der Anwendung ist weit wichtiger als die Häufigkeit. Das Auftragen auf feuchter Haut und das Verschließen mit einem verschließenden Öl ist die entscheidende Technik. Zwei gut ausgeführte Anwendungen mit dieser Methode schlagen sechs hastig aufgetragene Anwendungen auf trockener Haut.
Was ist der Unterschied zwischen Ekzem und trockener Haut nach der Menopause?+
Trockene Haut (Xerosis) ist gleichmäßig, leicht juckend und spricht innerhalb weniger Tage auf grundlegende Befeuchtung an. Ekzem beinhaltet immunvermittelte Entzündung: Rötung, intensives Jucken, mögliche Nässen oder Krusten und eine defekte Hautbarriere auf zellulärer Ebene. Der Schlüsseltest: Wenn eine gute Feuchtigkeitscreme, die eine Woche lang konsequent angewendet wird, Ihre Symptome nicht lindert, ist es wahrscheinlich Ekzem und wert, einen Dermatologen zur ordnungsgemäßen Diagnose aufzusuchen. Ekzem erscheint auch eher in bestimmten Flecken (innere Ellbogen, hinter den Knien, Hände, Gesicht) statt gleichmäßig über große Bereiche.
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Line
Written by
Gründerin & Hautpflege-Expertin · Frøya Organics

Line ist die Gründerin von Frøya Organics – eine ehemalige Medienschaffende, die ihre anspruchsvolle Karriere aufgab, als sich Burnout auf ihrer Haut zu zeigen begann, und das Stadtleben gegen einen kleinen Bauernhof in Norwegen eintauschte. Es folgten Jahre intensiver Forschung: das Studium der Hautbarrierefunktion, von Entzündungen und Bioverfügbarkeit neben jahrhundertealten nordischen Hautpflegetraditionen – bis eine Entdeckung alles veränderte: Bis zu 64 % dessen, was wir auf unsere Haut auftragen, wird vom Körper aufgenommen, doch die meisten kommerziellen Produkte sind voller Füllstoffe, synthetischer Duftstoffe und hormonell wirksamer Substanzen. Frøya war ihre Antwort: jede Formel wie vollwertige Nahrung für die Haut entwickelt – kein Wasser, keine Füllstoffe, nur potente arktische Botanika, die mit dem Körper arbeiten, so wie nordische Frauen es seit Generationen vertrauen – heute bestätigt durch die moderne Wissenschaft. Heute leitet Line die Inhaltsstoffphilosophie der Marke und eine wachsende Gemeinschaft von über 88.000 Frauen weltweit, indem sie komplexe Wissenschaft in ehrliche, klare Empfehlungen übersetzt – ihre vollständige Geschichte lesen Sie auf froyaorganics.com/pages/our-saga.