BioRePeel, PRX-T33 and Polynucleotides: The Skin Treatments Defining 2026

CPD.ME.UK20 June 20265 min read

Skin rejuvenation is one of the fastest-moving areas of the beauty and aesthetics industry, and 2026 is showing a clear shift in what clients and practitioners are most interested in.

After researching aesthetic clinics, practitioner profiles, treatment menus, training providers and before-and-after results, the strongest trend is clear: clients want healthier-looking skin, improved texture, brighter tone and natural rejuvenation without heavy downtime.

Rather than focusing only on traditional peels or resurfacing treatments, many clinics are now promoting advanced skin rejuvenation products and regenerative protocols such as BioRePeel, PRX-T33 and Polynucleotides.

Key Insight: The skin treatment market in 2026 is being shaped by low-downtime, regenerative and skin-quality focused treatments. Clients want visible improvement, but they also want treatments that fit around work, family life and social commitments.

1. BioRePeel

BioRePeel is one of the most talked-about skin treatments in the aesthetics industry right now.

It is often promoted as a next-generation peel because it combines exfoliating, revitalising and biostimulating actions with minimal visible peeling compared with many traditional peel treatments.

BioRePeel is commonly used for clients who want brighter, smoother and fresher-looking skin without significant downtime. It is frequently advertised for dull skin, uneven texture, congestion, acne-prone skin, pigmentation concerns and general skin rejuvenation.

Why BioRePeel is gaining attention: It fits the modern client demand for visible skin improvement without the dramatic peeling, redness or recovery period often associated with deeper traditional peels.

For practitioners, BioRePeel is attractive because it can be incorporated into treatment plans for a wide range of skin concerns and is often positioned as part of a wider skin health journey.

2. PRX-T33

PRX-T33 is another skin treatment gaining strong attention, particularly amongst clinics focusing on biorevitalisation and minimal-downtime rejuvenation.

It is commonly described as a needle-free biorevitalisation treatment and is often associated with the phrase “no-peel peel”. PRX-T33 contains trichloroacetic acid, hydrogen peroxide and kojic acid, and is used to support skin texture, radiance and firmness.

Unlike traditional TCA peels that can involve visible peeling and recovery, PRX-T33 is marketed as a treatment that stimulates the skin without creating the same level of surface exfoliation.

Common PRX-T33 treatment goals include:

  • Improving skin radiance
  • Supporting firmness
  • Improving uneven skin tone
  • Supporting collagen stimulation
  • Refreshing dull or tired-looking skin

Its popularity reflects the same wider trend as BioRePeel: clients want advanced skin treatments, but they also want minimal disruption to everyday life.

3. Polynucleotides

Polynucleotides are one of the strongest regenerative aesthetics trends of 2026.

Unlike peels, Polynucleotides are injectable regenerative treatments. They are not mainly used to add volume like traditional dermal fillers. Instead, they are used to support skin quality, hydration, elasticity, tissue repair and collagen stimulation.

Polynucleotides are commonly discussed for under-eye rejuvenation, facial skin quality, neck rejuvenation, crepey skin, fine lines and hair restoration protocols.

Why Polynucleotides are defining 2026: They represent the wider move towards regenerative aesthetics, where the goal is to improve skin function and tissue quality rather than simply create instant cosmetic change.

Research reviews have reported promising uses for Polynucleotides in aesthetic medicine, including improving skin texture, wrinkle depth and facial appearance. This helps explain why they are being discussed so widely across the industry.

4. Skin Boosters and Regenerative Skin Protocols

Alongside BioRePeel, PRX-T33 and Polynucleotides, skin boosters continue to be a major part of the skin rejuvenation conversation.

Treatments such as Profhilo, Seventy Hyal 2000, Jalupro, Sunekos and Ameela are often discussed by practitioners as part of skin-quality focused treatment planning.

These treatments are commonly associated with hydration, glow, skin elasticity and overall rejuvenation, making them highly relevant to the natural-results trend.

Many clinics are also moving towards combination skin protocols, where treatments are layered carefully across a longer plan rather than offered as one-off appointments.

5. Why These Treatments Are So Popular

BioRePeel, PRX-T33 and Polynucleotides are popular because they reflect what many clients are asking for in 2026.

Clients increasingly want treatments that improve how their skin looks and feels without dramatically changing their face. They want smoother texture, brighter tone, healthier skin and natural results.

They are also looking for treatments that fit around busy lives. Minimal downtime, subtle progression and personalised treatment planning are becoming key selling points within the aesthetics industry.

Summary of the Skin Treatments Defining 2026

Treatment Why It Is Popular
BioRePeel Low-downtime peel-style rejuvenation for brighter, smoother-looking skin.
PRX-T33 Needle-free biorevitalisation with minimal visible peeling.
Polynucleotides Regenerative injectable treatment focused on skin quality and tissue repair.
Skin Boosters Hydration, glow and skin elasticity support.
Combination Protocols Personalised skin transformation plans using multiple treatments.

What This Means for Aesthetics Training Providers

For aesthetics training providers, the popularity of these treatments creates both opportunity and responsibility.

Learners need more than product knowledge. They need to understand skin anatomy, consultation, contraindications, treatment suitability, aftercare, complications, consent, professional boundaries and when to refer clients elsewhere.

This is particularly important when treatments are promoted heavily online. Training should help practitioners understand not only what is trending, but how to deliver treatments safely, ethically and professionally.

CPD Accreditation for Skin Treatment Training Providers

If you deliver BioRePeel, PRX-T33, skin rejuvenation or aesthetics training, CPD accreditation can help demonstrate quality, professionalism and structured learning outcomes. CPD.ME.UK supports training providers with accreditation, quality scoring, learner CPD tracking and certificate verification.

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