Why you may be getting a pimple in the same spot every month and how you can stop it
You know it is coming. You could practically mark it on a calendar. Some time in the week before your period, or right around a particular stressful stretch, a pimple shows up. Not somewhere random. Not somewhere new. It shows up in the exact same spot it has been showing up for months. Maybe years. The same corner of your chin, the same side of your jaw, the same spot near your nose. You treat it, it fades, you forget about it. And then next month, like clockwork, it is back.
A pimple in the same spot every month is not bad luck. It is not random. It is your skin following a pattern that has a very specific reason behind it. And the reason it keeps appearing in that exact location, rather than anywhere else on your face, is actually the most useful piece of information you have. Because location means everything when it comes to recurring acne.
This blog is going to explain exactly why that pimple keeps choosing the same address every single month, what the location of your recurring pimple is actually telling you about what is happening inside your body, and what a dermatologist would recommend you actually do to stop the cycle for good.
Three Reasons a Pimple Keeps Coming Back to the Same Spot

Your Hormones Keep Sending It to the Same Address
Certain zones of the face, particularly the jawline, chin, and lower cheeks, have a higher concentration of oil glands that are directly sensitive to hormonal shifts. Every month when hormone levels change, those glands in that specific zone respond first and most dramatically. The pimple returns to the same spot because the same trigger activates the same glands every cycle.

There Is a Blocked Follicle That Never Fully Clears
When a pimple appears and you pop it, pick it, or treat it incorrectly, the follicle underneath does not always clear completely. A residue of dead cells, dried oil, and inflammation stays trapped inside. Each month, when conditions are right, that same follicle fills up and flares again. You are not getting a new pimple. You are getting the same one, over and over.

A Daily Habit Is Repeatedly Triggering That Exact Spot
Your phone rests against your left cheek on every call. You rest your chin in your right hand when you sit at your desk. Your helmet strap presses the same point on your jaw every morning commute. These daily mechanical triggers introduce bacteria and friction to the same zone repeatedly, and the skin in that zone keeps breaking out in response.
Why Hormones Are the Most Common Reason Behind a Pimple in the Same Spot Every Month
If your recurring pimple appears in the days leading up to your period, hormones are almost certainly the main driver. Here is why this happens with such predictable timing every single month.
In the second half of your menstrual cycle, estrogen drops and androgens become relatively more dominant. Androgens are hormones present in all women and they have a direct effect on the sebaceous glands in the skin. When androgen activity increases, these oil glands produce more sebum than usual. The excess oil mixes with dead skin cells and clogs the follicle. Bacteria move in. Inflammation follows. A pimple appears.
Now here is the part that answers your real question. Not every follicle on your face responds equally to this hormonal shift. The follicles along the jawline, chin, and lower cheeks have more androgen receptors than follicles on the forehead or nose. So when androgens spike, those specific follicles respond the most. And within that zone, the follicles that have been previously blocked or inflamed are even more reactive. That is why this type of hormonal acne does not jump around your face. It finds its spot and it stays loyal to it month after month.
The Blocked Follicle That Is Running the Whole Show
Under the surface of a recurring pimple, something is almost always sitting quietly between flare-ups. It might be a comedone, which is a blocked pore filled with dried oil and dead skin cells that has not fully cleared. It might be residual inflammation from the last time the pimple appeared. Or it might be a small amount of cutibacterium acnes, the bacteria that live inside hair follicles and drive the infection and swelling we recognise as a pimple. When conditions favour it, that colony multiplies rapidly and the follicle flares again.
This is especially true for cystic acne, which is the deep, painful, nodular type that sits under the skin rather than forming a visible head. Cystic pimples do not drain properly the way surface pimples do. The contents stay trapped beneath the skin, the follicle wall weakens over time from repeated inflammation, and each subsequent flare-up happens in a follicle that is essentially already primed and waiting.
Every time you pop or squeeze a recurring pimple, you push some of that content deeper and create micro-tears in the follicle wall. The healing process creates internal scar tissue that makes the follicle narrower and more prone to blocking again. In other words, popping a recurring pimple is one of the most reliable ways to guarantee it comes back next month.
What the Location of Your Recurring Pimple Is Actually Telling You
Where your pimple keeps appearing is one of the most useful diagnostic clues a dermatologist uses. Different zones of the face have different underlying causes for recurring breakouts. Here is what each location is most commonly pointing toward.
When a Recurring Pimple in the Same Spot Means Something More Serious
Most recurring pimples are hormonal or mechanical and manageable with the right approach. But there are a few situations where a pimple in the same spot every month is a signal that something deeper needs attention.
- If the jawline and chin pimples keep returning regardless of where you are in your cycle, appear on both sides of the jaw, and come with irregular or painful periods, excess body hair, or unexplained weight changes, get a hormonal panel checked for PCOS. Jaw acne is one of the most consistent outward signs of PCOS in young women in India and it rarely responds to topical treatment alone while the underlying hormonal imbalance continues.
- If a pimple in the same spot has been recurring for more than six months, is always deep and painful, never forms a proper head, and leaves a dark mark every time it finally resolves, this is likely cystic acne that needs clinical treatment. Over the counter products will not clear a follicle that is repeatedly blocking at this depth. A dermatologist can offer targeted treatments including topical retinoids, oral antibiotics, or hormonal therapy depending on the cause.
- Each time a deep pimple resolves, it leaves behind post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH), which is the dark mark that lingers for weeks or months after the pimple itself has gone. When the same follicle flares every month, PIH never fully fades before the next cycle begins. Over time, a permanent dark patch builds up in that spot. Treating the recurring pimple is the only way to stop this cycle of pigmentation from deepening.
Habits That Keep Sending the Pimple Back Every Month
Sometimes the pimple keeps returning not because of hormones or a trapped follicle but because of something you do every single day without realising it. These habits silently reload the same trigger month after month.
- Resting your chin or cheek in your hand while working. Your hands carry oils, bacteria, and whatever you have touched all day. Pressing them against the same spot on your face for hours consistently introduces exactly the right conditions for a blocked follicle to flare.
- Taking calls with your phone pressed against your face. Phone screens are among the most bacteria-laden surfaces most people touch every day. Pressing it against the same cheek for every call transfers that bacteria to the same zone of skin consistently. Use earphones or speakerphone and wipe your screen with an antibacterial wipe daily.
- Never changing your pillowcase. You sleep on it for seven or eight hours every night. It collects oil, sweat, dead skin, and whatever product is in your hair. All of that transfers to the same zone of your face night after night. Changing your pillowcase every two to three days is one of the simplest and most effective changes you can make for recurring cheek or jaw pimples.
- Touching or picking the spot between flare-ups. Even when there is no active pimple, the follicle underneath is still sensitised. Repeated touching introduces bacteria and keeps mild inflammation going beneath the surface, which means the next flare-up has a much easier time getting started.
- Using a heavy moisturiser or foundation that blocks pores over that specific zone. Some products that feel fine on most of the face are just heavy enough to tip a sensitised follicle into a flare. Switching to non-comedogenic products, especially over the recurring spot, often breaks the cycle more effectively than any spot treatment.
What to Stop Doing Right Now
- Stop squeezing or popping the pimple. Every single time. This is the one habit that most reliably guarantees the pimple returns in the same spot next month with more force. Popping pushes bacteria deeper, tears the follicle wall, and creates scarring that makes the pore more vulnerable to every subsequent flare-up.
- Stop applying toothpaste, ice directly on skin, or anything not designed for acne as a spot treatment. These do not resolve the follicle issue and often leave additional irritation or burns over an already inflamed spot.
- Stop over-washing the area thinking it will help. Washing the same spot more than twice a day strips the surrounding skin, triggers more oil production as a compensatory response, and makes the follicle more reactive, not less.
- Stop accepting a monthly recurring pimple as something you just have to live with. A pimple in the same spot every month is your skin repeating the same distress signal. It is worth listening to and it is worth treating properly.
What Actually Helps When a Pimple Keeps Coming Back in the Same Spot
Breaking the cycle of a recurring pimple requires addressing it both during the flare and in between flare-ups. Most people only treat it when it appears. That is too late to interrupt the cycle.
- Apply a salicylic acid or benzoyl peroxide spot treatment to the area two weeks before your expected flare-up, not just when the pimple appears. Salicylic acid works inside the pore to dissolve the buildup that triggers the flare. Starting it early means the follicle is already clear when hormones peak.
- Switch every product that touches that zone to non-comedogenic formulations. Your moisturiser, sunscreen, foundation, and concealer should all be labelled non-comedogenic if you are using them over an acne-prone spot. Heavy or occlusive products over a sensitised follicle are enough to tip a quiet pore into a full flare.
- Remove every mechanical trigger linked to that spot. Clean your phone screen daily. Change your pillowcase every two to three days. Stop resting your face in your hand at your desk. These feel like small changes but they eliminate a constant and consistent source of reinfection.
- If the pimple is on the jaw or chin and clearly tied to your cycle, speak to a dermatologist about hormonal management options. Low-dose hormonal therapy, spironolactone, or targeted retinoid treatment can interrupt the monthly hormonal acne cycle in a way that no topical product alone can achieve.
- Address the dark mark that forms after each flare. Apply a niacinamide or vitamin C serum consistently over the spot between flare-ups to fade the post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation before the next cycle begins. Breaking the PIH buildup is just as important as breaking the acne cycle itself.
Summary
A pimple in the same spot every month is your skin saying the same thing every month in the only language it has. The sooner you listen to what the location and timing are telling you, the sooner you can actually stop the cycle instead of just managing it one flare at a time. If you have been dealing with this for more than three or four months, that is long enough. A conversation with a dermatologist will tell you in one visit what no amount of spot treatment or skincare switching has been able to tell you in months. Your skin deserves a proper answer, not just another month of the same pimple in the same place.



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