If your skin feels tight, squeaky, and a little itchy after a swim, that’s chlorine and skin doing their usual dance. Chlorine keeps pool water safe to swim in, but it’s hard on the thin layer of oils that keeps your skin soft and protected. The fix isn’t to avoid the pool — it’s to rinse off fast and put the oils back. Here’s exactly what’s happening to your skin and the simple post-swim routine that keeps it comfortable.

Quick answer
- Why it happens: Chlorine and the by-products in pool water wash away your skin’s surface lipids, so water escapes more easily and skin feels dry and tight.
- The fix, in order: rinse with fresh water right after swimming → gentle cleanser if needed → moisturize while skin is still damp.
- Best moisturizers: ones with ceramides, glycerin, or other barrier-repair ingredients that put lipids and water back.
- If you swim often: make this routine automatic and choose richer creams for hands, elbows, and shins.
- See a clinician if: you get a persistent rash, hives, or worsening eczema after swimming.
Why chlorine dries out your skin
Your outermost skin layer, the stratum corneum, works like a brick wall: skin cells are the bricks and a mix of fatty lipids (including ceramides) is the mortar. That mortar keeps water in and irritants out. Dryness is closely tied to an impaired barrier, and treatments that restore those lipids reduce the water loss that makes skin feel tight.1
Chlorinated water chips away at the mortar in a few ways:
- It strips surface oils. Chlorine and warm water dissolve and rinse off the thin sebum layer that normally slows water loss.
- It raises the pH. Pool water is more alkaline than your skin’s slightly acidic surface, which disrupts the enzymes that keep the barrier healthy.
- It leaves by-products behind. When chlorine reacts with sweat, sunscreen, and other organic matter, it forms chloramines — the harsh “pool smell” compounds that can irritate skin and eyes.
The result: more transepidermal water loss (water evaporating out through a leaky barrier), which is the engine behind that tight, dry, sometimes flaky feeling. If yours is already on the sensitive side, see what a struggling barrier looks like in damaged skin barrier.

What it feels like
Chlorine’s effect on skin shows up as:
| Symptom | What’s behind it |
|---|---|
| Tightness right after | Surface oils stripped, water evaporating fast |
| Itchiness | Dry, slightly inflamed barrier |
| Flaking or rough patches | Dehydrated outer layer, especially on shins and forearms |
| Redness or stinging | Chloramine irritation, more in sensitive skin |
| Eczema flare | Pre-existing barrier weakness pushed over the edge |
Most people feel tightness and mild itch. If you have eczema or sensitive skin, the same exposure can tip you into a flare, because the barrier had less margin to begin with.
The post-swim routine that works
The principle is simple: get the chlorine off, then put the oils and water back before your skin dries out.
- Rinse within a few minutes. A quick fresh-water shower removes most of the chlorine and chloramines clinging to your skin and hair. The sooner, the better.
- Cleanse gently — only if needed. Use a mild, fragrance-free, non-foaming cleanser. Harsh, squeaky-clean soaps strip even more oil. Skip the loofah scrubbing.
- Moisturize on damp skin. Pat dry, don’t rub, and apply moisturizer within about three minutes while skin is still slightly wet. This traps water against the skin instead of letting it evaporate.
- Go richer where you’re driest. Hands, elbows, knees, and shins have fewer oil glands and need more.
What to look for in a moisturizer
Barrier-repair moisturizers built around physiological lipids and functional ingredients are designed to maintain and restore barrier function, and the structure of the lipid layers in the stratum corneum is central to keeping that barrier working.2 Look for:
- Ceramides — they replace the exact lipids chlorine strips. More in ceramides.
- Glycerin or hyaluronic acid — humectants that pull water into the outer layer.
- Petrolatum or other occlusives — petrolatum has an immediate barrier-repairing effect on stripped stratum corneum.1
- Niacinamide — supports the barrier and calms redness; see niacinamide benefits.
A ceramide-containing lipid mixture has been shown to improve barrier disorders and reduce water loss through the skin, which is exactly the problem chlorine creates.1
Suggested read: Double Cleansing: What It Is and Who Needs It
Do and don’t
Do
- Rinse with fresh water as soon as you get out
- Apply a barrier cream or lotion while skin is damp
- Use fragrance-free products if you’re prone to irritation
- Rinse and condition your hair too — chlorine dries that out as well
- Apply a thin layer of lotion or oil before swimming if you’re very dry, as a light barrier
Don’t
- Let pool water dry on your skin for hours
- Scrub with harsh soaps or exfoliants the same day
- Take long, very hot showers afterward — heat strips more oil
- Ignore a rash that keeps coming back after swims
If you swim regularly
Frequent swimmers — lap swimmers, kids on swim teams, water-aerobics regulars — get the most cumulative drying, so the routine has to be consistent rather than occasional. A few extra habits help:
- Keep a small tube of moisturizer in your gym bag and apply right in the locker room.
- Use a thicker night cream on hands and body on swim days.
- If chlorine bothers your face, a gentle barrier moisturizer morning and night keeps the surface stocked with lipids.
- Don’t forget sun: outdoor pools mean UV exposure too, so pair your routine with sunscreen. Moisturizing does not replace it — see do supplements replace sunscreen and SPF explained.
Your hair and scalp take the same hit. Chlorine dries out hair, leaves it brittle, and can give light hair a greenish tint over time (that’s actually copper in the water, not the chlorine itself). Wetting your hair with clean water before you swim helps it soak up less pool water, and a swim cap cuts exposure further. Rinse and condition right after, and use a clarifying shampoo now and then if you swim several times a week.
Remember that recreational water itself can carry germs that cause skin rashes and other illness, so rinsing off serves double duty.3
Suggested read: Swimmer's Ear: Symptoms, Prevention, When to See a Doctor
When to see a clinician
Most chlorine dryness is a cosmetic, fixable problem. But check in with a doctor or dermatologist if you have:
- A persistent or spreading rash after swimming
- Hives or swelling (a possible sensitivity reaction)
- Eczema that flares every time and won’t settle with moisturizing
- Cracked, weeping, or infected-looking skin
These can point to true irritant or allergic reactions, or an eczema picture that needs prescription-strength help.
Bottom line
Chlorine and skin clash because pool water strips the lipid “mortar” that holds moisture in, raises your skin’s pH, and leaves irritating chloramines behind — all of which speed up water loss and leave you tight and itchy. The fix is fast and reliable: rinse with fresh water right after swimming, cleanse gently only if you need to, and moisturize on damp skin with a ceramide- or glycerin-based barrier cream. Frequent swimmers should make it automatic and go richer on dry spots. For the bigger skin picture, see skin barrier, damaged skin barrier, and the full after-the-water reset in post-beach skincare.
Lodén M. Role of topical emollients and moisturizers in the treatment of dry skin barrier disorders. Am J Clin Dermatol. 2003;4(11):771-788. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎
Madnani N, Deo J, Dalal K, et al. Revitalizing the skin: Exploring the role of barrier repair moisturizers. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2024;23(5):1533-1540. PubMed | DOI ↩︎
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Swimming and Your Health. CDC Healthy Swimming. Link ↩︎





