Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.

You noticed a small soft bump under your arm, or a patch of skin on the back of your neck that looks darker and almost velvety – like it won’t wash off. Maybe you’ve been embarrassed by it, or brushed it off, or quietly worried. What almost certainly did not happen is a doctor looking you in the eye and saying: this is a PCOS skin symptom, and here’s why your body is doing it. That silence is not your fault, and it ends here.

PCOS skin tags and the other visible skin changes that come with polycystic ovary syndrome are among the most overlooked – and most distressing – signs of the condition. They are not random, not a hygiene issue, and not cosmetic vanity. They are your skin reflecting what is happening with your hormones and insulin. Understanding that changes everything.

What’s actually happening – the House metaphor

Think of your body as a house with a central heating system. In PCOS, that system – driven largely by insulin – runs too hot. The thermostat (your insulin signalling) keeps cranking up the heat even when the rooms don’t need it. All that excess warmth has to go somewhere, and one place it shows up is the walls: your skin.

Here’s the specific mechanism. Many women with PCOS have insulin resistance – the body’s cells don’t respond efficiently to insulin, so the pancreas pumps out more and more of it. High circulating insulin stimulates skin cells called keratinocytes and fibroblasts to overgrow in certain areas. The result? Small soft growths (skin tags) and thick, darkened patches – a condition called acanthosis nigricans. Elevated androgens (testosterone and related hormones, which are also characteristically high in PCOS) add to the picture, contributing to skin texture changes and sometimes excess hair on the same patches.

None of this means your skin is dirty or broken. It means your house’s heating system needs attention.

The three skin changes most linked to PCOS

1. Skin tags (acrochordons)

Skin tags are tiny, soft, flesh-coloured or slightly darker growths that hang from the skin on a thin stalk. They most commonly appear in skin folds – the neck, armpits, groin, under the breasts, or inside the thighs. On their own they are harmless, but their presence – especially in multiples – is a well-recognised marker of insulin resistance. According to the NHS, skin tags are benign and very common, but clusters of them appearing in your 20s or 30s alongside other symptoms absolutely deserve a conversation with your doctor.

2. Acanthosis nigricans – the velvety dark patches

This is the dark, velvety or rough-feeling discolouration that typically appears on the back of the neck, in the armpits, around the groin, or in elbow creases. It can look like a shadow that won’t scrub away, because it isn’t a stain – it’s a thickening of the skin driven by high insulin levels. Acanthosis nigricans is considered a clinical sign of insulin resistance and appears across all skin tones, though it is most visible on medium to deeper complexions. If a doctor has ever dismissed it as “just hyperpigmentation,” it’s worth going back and asking specifically about insulin levels.

3. General skin texture changes

Beyond tags and dark patches, some women with PCOS notice skin that feels rougher, thicker, or more prone to congestion in certain areas. Elevated androgens affect sebaceous glands (oil production) and can alter the skin’s surface texture even independently of acne. If you also experience PCOS-related acne or oily skin, the same androgen excess is likely driving both.

What these skin changes are often mistaken for

These symptoms get misread constantly – and that misreading delays diagnosis. Acanthosis nigricans is frequently dismissed as a tan line, dirt, or a fungal skin condition. Skin tags are waved away as “just ageing” even in women in their twenties. Rough skin patches get attributed to eczema or keratosis pilaris without anyone asking why they appeared or worsened.

The crucial difference: these PCOS-linked changes tend to cluster in the same areas (neck, underarms, groin), often appear together, and typically coincide with other PCOS signs like irregular periods or unwanted hair growth. If you also notice hair thinning or unusual hair growth patterns, that’s another piece of the same hormonal picture worth raising with your GP.

What actually helps

Lifestyle approaches

Skincare and topical options

Medical options

When to see a doctor

Please do book an appointment if:

You are entitled to ask your GP to check your fasting insulin and glucose levels, and to request a PCOS workup if you haven’t had one. You do not have to accept “it’s just your skin” as an answer.

Frequently asked questions

Do PCOS skin tags go away on their own?

Skin tags don’t usually disappear without treatment, but addressing the underlying insulin resistance – through lifestyle changes or medication – can slow new ones forming. Existing tags can be removed by a clinician once the hormonal picture is being managed, otherwise new ones tend to reappear in the same areas.

Is acanthosis nigricans permanent?

Not necessarily. It can fade significantly when insulin resistance improves, whether through dietary changes, exercise, medication, or a combination. Topical treatments can help texture and comfort in the meantime, but the most meaningful improvement usually comes from treating the underlying cause.

Can you have PCOS skin changes without being overweight?

Yes, absolutely. Insulin resistance and the skin changes it causes can occur in women of any size. Lean women with PCOS are frequently missed precisely because doctors associate these signs only with higher body weight. If you have skin tags or acanthosis nigricans, your insulin levels are worth checking regardless of your weight.

Should I see a GP or a dermatologist?

Start with your GP, who can assess whether these skin changes fit a pattern of PCOS and arrange blood tests. A dermatologist is useful for managing the skin symptoms directly – texture, pigmentation, removal – but they’ll work best alongside a doctor who is also treating the hormonal root cause.

Are these skin changes dangerous?

The skin changes themselves are benign. However, they are meaningful signals of insulin resistance, which over time increases the risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular changes. Think of them as your body flagging something worth addressing – not a crisis, but a clear reason to seek proper assessment and support.

This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves – but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.

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