ASG Eye Hospital

Dark Circles Under Eyes: Causes, Natural Remedies & Best Treatments

Nobody Wakes Up Wanting to Look Exhausted

The thing about dark circles is that they are visible when someone hasn’t slept at all. While some people get a solid eight hours of sleep and still look like they haven’t gotten any sleep. Where some stay up all night and manage to get away with it! That’s not just a coincidence; it’s not even fair.

One of the most common complaints eye care specialists hear is about dark circles and, unfortunately, most people have been treating their eyes, face and neck to them ineffectively for years. They purchase eye creams, drink more water, go to bed earlier – and nothing changes. That usually happens because they never figured out the actual cause in the first place.

What Causes Dark Circles Under the Eyes?

Dark circles are commonly caused by lack of sleep, genetics, allergies, dehydration, ageing, iron deficiency, and excessive screen time. The thin skin under the eyes makes blood vessels more visible, creating a darker appearance. Natural remedies like cold tea bags, almond oil, hydration, and healthy sleep habits may help reduce under-eye darkness over time.

What Is Really Going On Under the Eyes

The skin under the eyes is very thin and the thinnest of part on the face. It’s this that allows blood vessels to become more visible underneath, creating the appearance of a dark bruised appearance. Collagen breaks down with age, and also fat pads located under the eye start to diminish, further deteriorating the situation.

There’s no doubt sleep deprivation is a big factor. When someone is not rested, skin goes paler, and that makes the blood vessels underneath stand out even more. But dark circles causes go well beyond sleep. Genetics is a big one — some families just carry dark pigmentation around the eyes, and no amount of sleep fixes that. Allergies cause blood to pool and slow down around the eye area, leading to puffiness and that shadowy look. Another cause is iron deficiency which is underdiagnosed. Over time, skin can darken due to dehydration, sun exposure or by rubbing your eyes just to get rid of the itchiness.

When people tell you “just go to sleep longer”, they’re focusing on only a small portion of a larger problem.

Common Causes & Solutions for Dark Circles

Cause of Dark CirclesHow It Affects EyesHelpful Solution
Lack of SleepMakes blood vessels more visibleMaintain 7–8 hours sleep
GeneticsNatural pigmentation under eyesSpecialist consultation
AllergiesCauses puffiness & rubbingTreat allergies regularly
DehydrationSkin appears dull & sunkenDrink enough water daily
Iron DeficiencyReduces healthy blood flowEat iron-rich foods
AgeingCollagen & fat loss under eyesUse sunscreen & eye care
Excess Screen TimeEye strain & tired appearanceReduce screen exposure
Sun ExposureIncreases pigmentationApply sunscreen daily

Natural Remedies for Dark Circles That Are Worth the Effort

Not everything needs a prescription. These are actually a number of actual natural remedies for dark circles which really work, provided you have realistic expectations. Perhaps these are not instant solutions, but they will make a difference for a long term for sure.

Tea bags will work surprisingly well when used in the cold. Green or black tea has caffeine that will narrow down the blood vessels and diminish the puffiness. Chilling the used bags and resting them on closed eyes for ten minutes a day is a simple routine that costs almost nothing.

Raw Potato Juice is often overlooked as an old wives’ tale, but there’s some logic there. Potatoes have natural Vitamin C that helps remove pigmentation and promotes the formation of collagen in thin skin. Applying the juice under the eyes a few times a week, leaving it on for fifteen minutes, and rinsing off has shown genuine results in people who stick with it.

Almond oil massaged gently under the eyes before bed is another one worth trying. It absorbs slowly overnight, and the Vitamin K content helps improve the skin’s texture and colour gradually.

Diet matters more than most people realise. Iron-rich foods like lentils, dark leafy greens, and eggs — combined with Vitamin C from citrus fruits — feed the under-eye skin from within. No topical remedy works as well when the body is running low on what it actually needs.

Eye Care Tips That Prevent Them From Coming Back

If you try some of the basic eye care tips, then you can remove dark circles from returning back. Try to use an extra pillow, it would keep your head slightly upwards, preventing the fluid to set under the eyes overnight. Applying sunscreen every day is considered good for preventing the effect of UV rays on the thin skin under the eyes faster than most realise.

Some more daily basic activities like managing your seasonal allergies consistently, reducing the screen time before sleeping and drinking plenty of water over the day compound over weeks and months into real, visible changes.

When It Is Time to Visit an Eye Hospital

People who have dark rings or a lot of colour because of their genes can only get some of the benefits of natural treatments. Clinical under eye treatment techniques like laser therapy or skin fillers are able to handle structural and colour issues that home treatments cannot fix. These should always be explored with a qualified specialist at a reliable eye hospital.

At ASG Eye Hospital, patients are not handed a generic skincare plan. They receive a proper assessment, an honest conversation about realistic outcomes, and a treatment approach that is built around their specific eyes — not a template. That difference in care is what actually gets results.

rishabh mirajkar

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Overview

Job Title: Consultant Ophthalmologist

Location: Jaipur, Rajasthan

Job Category: Technical/ IT Support

Work Employment:  Full time

What you work:

  • Diagnose and treat patients with a focus on Ophthalmologist.
  • Collaborate with senior doctors and multidisciplinary teams.
  • Ensure patient-centric care and follow clinical protocols.
  • Contribute to research, training, or hospital initiatives (if applicable).

Mandatory skills:

  • Relevant medical degree / certification.
  • Strong knowledge of ophthalmology practices / healthcare protocols.
  • Excellent communication and patient-handling skills.
  • Ability to work in fast-paced healthcare environments.

Preferred Qualifications:

  • Experience: 3 to 6 years of experience
  • Prior experience in eye care / multi-speciality hospitals.
  • Fellowship or advanced training in Ophthalmologist.
  • Familiarity with advanced diagnostic tools and surgical techniques.
  • Passion for innovation, patient care, and continuous learning.

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