Guide
What to Tell Your Practitioner Before Your First Sugaring Appointment
A brief conversation before your session helps your practitioner calibrate the treatment to your skin. Here is what is worth sharing — and why it changes the result.
The consultation before a first sugaring session is brief — five minutes at most. But the information exchanged in those five minutes determines whether we can treat you as effectively and safely as possible, or whether we proceed with important gaps in our understanding of your skin. Most clients underestimate how many relevant factors there are. This is not a comprehensive medical questionnaire; it is a targeted conversation about the things most likely to affect your session.
Your Current Skincare Routine
Specifically: whether you use retinol, alpha-hydroxy acids (AHAs), beta-hydroxy acids (BHAs), or vitamin C on the areas to be treated. These are all active ingredients that accelerate cell turnover and, as a consequence, thin the outermost layers of the skin over time. Skin that is regularly treated with actives is meaningfully more sensitive to mechanical hair removal.
If you use retinol on your face and we are treating the upper lip or chin, we need to know. If you use a glycolic acid body lotion on your legs, that is relevant. We may ask you to pause use in the days before your session, or we will adjust the technique accordingly. This is especially important to discuss if you have sensitive skin, where actives can compound reactivity.
Any Medications You Are Currently Taking
Two categories matter most:
- —Blood thinners (including aspirin taken regularly) — these increase capillary fragility and can make the skin bruise or react more readily to hair removal
- —Isotretinoin (Accutane) — this is a contraindication for sugaring. Isotretinoin dramatically thins the skin and suppresses sebaceous gland function; hair removal from the root on isotretinoin-treated skin carries a genuine risk of skin lifting and damage. We do not treat clients currently on isotretinoin, and we ask that at least six months have passed since the final dose before proceeding with sugaring
Topical steroids are also relevant — long-term use thins the skin in the application area, which changes how it responds to treatment.
Skin Conditions
If you have a diagnosed skin condition affecting the areas to be treated, please tell us before the session begins rather than mentioning it as an afterthought mid-treatment. Conditions we routinely adapt for include:
- —Eczema — particularly in active or recently flared areas; we do not treat broken or actively inflamed skin
- —Psoriasis — plaques must not be treated directly
- —Rosacea — affects facial treatment significantly
- —A history of folliculitis — relevant to how we advise on aftercare and follow-up
None of these conditions are necessarily a barrier to sugaring, but they change how we approach the session.
Recent Skin Treatments
Chemical peels, laser treatments, microneedling, IPL, and dermabrasion all require a waiting period before sugaring can be safely performed on the same area. As a general guideline, we ask for a minimum of two to four weeks following any of these treatments before proceeding. If you are unsure of the interval, bring your treatment records or the aftercare advice your provider gave you — we can assess from there.
Your Previous Hair Removal History
How you have been removing hair, and when you last did so, directly affects the session. If you have been shaving, we need to know the date of your last shave — we need a minimum of 2–5mm of regrowth. If you have been waxing, your follicle cycle may already be partially synchronised and we can advise on the best timing. If you have had laser hair removal in the past, the density and texture of remaining hair may be different from a client who has never had any treatment.
Known Allergies
The sugar paste we use is composed of sugar, water, and lemon juice. Citrus sensitivity — though uncommon — is relevant, as is any known allergy to any component of the aftercare products we may use. Please mention any known allergies before we begin rather than after product has been applied.
Pregnancy
Pregnancy affects skin sensitivity considerably, and it also affects positioning for certain treatments. We can accommodate pregnant clients for many areas — but we adapt how the session is conducted, and some positions used for bikini or Brazilian treatments are not appropriate during later pregnancy. Please let us know at the time of booking and again when you arrive. We have a separate guide on sugaring during pregnancy if you would like more detail.
Sensitivity in Specific Areas
If a particular zone is historically reactive — if your inner thighs always respond with prolonged redness, if your bikini line has a history of ingrowns, if your underarms are perennially sensitive — tell us at the start. We can adjust technique, pacing, and the products we use post-treatment. Understanding how to manage redness after sugaring is also worth reading before your first session.
The more your practitioner knows before the session begins, the more precisely they can adapt every decision within it — from technique and pressure to aftercare guidance specific to you.
The consultation is not procedural. It is how we ensure that what we do in the next forty minutes is genuinely calibrated to the person in front of us.
— Maison Lumia