A fresher look without
overdoing it

Dark circles are not usually “just one thing.” For some people, it’s pigment that stays in the skin. For some people, it’s dark circles from natural hollowness, early volume loss, or puffiness under the eyes.

Finding out what is causing the darkness in your eye area and then picking the best mix of skin care and in-clinic options will give you the best results. At Mayam Aesthetics, the goal of eye beautification is to keep the area under the eyes smooth, bright, and natural-looking while being careful with the delicate skin there.

Mapping your under-eye shadows

You should look at the under-eye from different angles and in different lighting to get a good idea of how it looks. If the darkness changes a lot when you tilt your head, shadowing is probably a big part of it. If the color stays the same and looks more brown or gray, pigmentation may be the main cause.

If it looks more blue or purple, it usually means that the skin is thin and the blood vessels are easy to see. This map is important because each cause has a different “best tool,” and using the wrong one can make the area look puffy, uneven, or not change at all.

Three drivers behind
most dark circles

Most under-eye concerns fall into one (or a mix) of these categories:

Pigment: sun exposure, post-inflammatory changes, and uneven melanin can create a darker tone under the eyes.
Structure: a deeper tear trough or midface volume loss can create a shadow that reads as a dark circle even when the skin tone is even.
Puffiness: under-eye bags can cast a shadow downward and add heaviness to the lower lid area.

Once the cause is clear, you can build a plan that improves the area rather than chasing it with random products.

Brightening choices that
respect sensitive skin

If pigmentation is one of the things that is bothering you, protecting your skin from the sun every day is part of the treatment, not just something you can do. A broad-spectrum sunscreen with an SPF of at least 30 is usually the minimum, and tinted formulas are often preferred because iron oxides can help protect against visible light as well. This is a common reason why dark patches stay or come back.

After that, brightening is usually about a steady, skin-friendly consistency. Retinoids, vitamin C, azelaic acid, and gentle exfoliating acids (if your skin can handle them) can help your skin tone become clearer and more even over time. However, pigment doesn’t fade in a few days, so the routine needs time to work. With Mayam Aesthetic, the plan is to be careful and practical around the eyelid area, because irritation there can make dark spots more noticeable on skin that is prone to them.

Targeted support for
hollows and eye bags

Strategic volume support can help with shadowing when there is a problem with hollowness. But the area under the eyes is one of the most technically sensitive places for injectables. If the product is put on too thinly, it can make the skin look blue (this is called the Tyndall effect), and in some cases, swelling can last for a long time. If filler gets into a blood vessel that supplies the eye, there are also rare but serious risks.

For bags and puffiness, using a device or having surgery to fix the problem may be better than adding volume over and over again. People often say that lower eyelid surgery is meant to get rid of dark circles and bags under the eyes by moving or removing fat and sometimes a little bit of skin. The results are meant to last a long time.

When surgery is the
cleaner solution

If what you see is a real under-eye bag, surgery is usually the best option because it fixes the problem instead of trying to hide it. People usually say that lower eyelid surgery involves taking out or moving extra fat (and skin, if necessary) to make the area under the eyes less full and give it a smoother shape. It is also important to be clear about the scope of this method. It makes puffiness and the shape of the under-eye area better, but it is not meant to get rid of crow’s feet at the outer corners of the eyes.

The people at Mayam Aesthetic talk openly about things for this reason. If you want a more permanent fix instead of regular maintenance, the goal is to explain what surgery can realistically fix, what it won’t change on its own, and what your body type needs to look natural.

Red flags to mention
before treatment

  • New or rapidly worsening swelling around one eye
  • Pain, vision changes, or unusual eye symptoms
  • A history of strong reactions, severe sensitivity, or recurring eyelid dermatitis
  • Previous under-eye filler with lingering puffiness or unevenness
  • A tendency toward heavy swelling after minor procedures

These points help decide what is safe, what is likely to work, and what should be evaluated medically first.

Keeping the result
looking natural

Makeup for your eyes shouldn’t change how you look. You want to look rested, brighter, and smoother, without looking heavy or “overfilled.” The best results usually come from using smart daily protection, like sunscreen, along with carefully chosen in-clinic treatments that are done at the right time and checked as the area responds.

Mayam Aesthetics can customize your under-eye treatment plan to focus on natural results and safe techniques, depending on whether your darkness is caused by pigment, structure, puffiness, or a combination of these factors.