Last updated on March 4, 2026 by Giorgia Guazzarotti
eMatrix vs. Microneedling: What’s Best for Acne and Wrinkles? If you’re asking this question, chances are you’re dealing with something that’s been bothering you for some time. Maybe it’s the acne scars that are left because of every serum you’ve applied to them. Maybe it’s fine lines that start appearing before you’re ready, or skin that looks tired no matter how much sleep you’re getting. You’ve reached the point where skin care products feel like rearranging deck chairs and you want something that really goes deep and does real work. eMatrix and microneedling both promise exactly the same thing – but they’re actually different treatments, they’re better at different things, and choosing the wrong one means spending money on results you’re not even targeting. So here’s everything you need to know before you book anything.
eMatrix vs. Microneedling: What are they?
Microneedling is one that sounds even scarier than it is. Tiny needles, lots of them, make controlled holes all over your skin. Your body sees this and triggers its natural healing response: collagen begins to be produced, elastin is produced, and over time the skin rebuilds better than before. It’s basically tricking your body into thinking it needs to heal, which it does, from something much more controlled than the actual injury. When you need to go deep enough for things like acne scars or sagging skin, needle depths range from 0.5 mm for superficial material to 2.5 mm. It’s been around since the 1990s and the research supporting it is really good.
eMatrix is weirder and more interesting. Absolutely no needles (oops!) The Imatrix device uses bipolar radiofrequency energy delivered through a grid of electrodes to create a heat injury inside the dermis, while leaving most of the skin surface completely alone. Only about 5% of the top layer is disrupted, but the RF energy penetrates up to 450 micrometers deep into the dermis where it triggers the production of collagen and elastin. Histological studies (meaning they literally looked at the tissue under a microscope) showed better organized collagen, Restored elastic fibers, more hyaluronic acid. All from the heat. It’s kind of wild when you think about it. Also, the eMatrix is not a laser, even though people call it that all the time. It doesn’t use light energy, and this difference matters in ways that will be understood in a minute.
How do they work?
Microneedling physically penetrates the skin through the skin surface and the body reacts to it like any injury and triggers the healing process: collagen synthesis is activated and the skin is rebuilt. You’ll be red and a little puffy afterward because your skin has really been through something. This is normal.
eMatrix treatment heats the dermis via radiofrequency energy and the body reacts to thermal damage in the same way it reacts to any damage – by replacing it with new tissue. Because the skin surface remains mostly intact, recovery is quicker and the entire experience is less intense. You’re getting serious deep dermal remodeling without paying full price for your skin’s surface.
eMatrix vs Microneedling: Which is Better for Acne Scars?
This is where it gets interesting. A 2022 meta-analysis found that plain old standard microneedling (No extras, no radiofrequency, just needles) actually performed better for purposeful acne scar improvement. So if someone tries to tell you that you need the most advanced option for your scars, science doesn’t necessarily agree with them. However, Matrix has good data on acne scars. One study showed 20-70% improvement in six months. Rolling trails respond the best, boxcar trails take longer, and ice breaking trails are the bane of basically everyone, no matter what you throw at them.
eMatrix vs Microneedling: Which one is better for wrinkles and skin elasticity?
Both build new collagen, both improve fine lines over time, and both will actually make your skin look like it did a few years ago with enough sessions – so far so good for both. But this is where they start moving in slightly different directions.
eMatrix has more targeted clinical evidence specifically for aging and photoaging. In a study of 33 patients treated for photoaging, skin laxity, and wrinkles, more than half saw more than a 40% improvement in skin texture and 80% were satisfied with the results. It works especially well for laxity because it targets the deeper layers of the skin.
Microneedling for wrinkles is a different story – not a bad story, just a more subtle story. A good clinical study conducted on 48 subjects showed that four sessions of microneedling significantly improved wrinkle scoresSkin looseness, and skin texture at both the 90-day and 150-day marks. Another study conducted on 35 people showed significant improvement in facial wrinkles. Confirmed by blind evaluators. So yes, microneedling really works for fine lines. The difference is that its strongest, most consistent data is in the area of acne scars and texture. For tightening specifically, the results are real but less predictable, and they improve significantly when you move up to RF microneedling instead of the standard needle-only version.
If laxity is the main thing keeping you up at night, eMatrix is a more targeted tool. If wrinkles are one of many concerns and you are also struggling with blemishes or texture, microneedling handles the whole picture very well.
side effects
Microneedling has minimal downtime: It leaves you with mild redness and mild swelling, sensitive skin, for a day or two while everything heals, and then you’re done. The eMatrix gives you a grid-like pattern of marks on your skin from the electrodes (which look dangerous at first but fade) as well as redness for about 48 hours and grid marks that can last up to two weeks. Not a lot of downtime, but more than microneedling. Neither of those are dramatic, but maybe don’t book eMatrix a week before something important.
The thing that really matters to a lot of people: No treatment causes post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. Radiofrequency does not interact with melanin, neither does microneedling. Both are safe for darker skin in a way that laser resurfacing often is not, and it’s no small thing if you’ve been told beforehand that certain treatments are not suitable for your skin.
Connected: Does microneedling help or harm the skin?
eMatrix vs. Microneedling: How Many Sessions Do You Need?
None of this is a one-time thing, and if anyone tells you otherwise they are either lying or selling something. Microneedling typically means 3-6 treatment sessions for acne scars, less if you’re looking to improve general texture, about 4-6 weeks apart.. As the new collagen matures, the results slowly dawn on you – you won’t walk out of your first session transformed, but by session three you’ll start to notice that your skin looks different in a way that’s hard to explain but very obvious. eMatrix usually takes 3-4 sessions for optimal results. Same deal – commit to the full number of treatments or don’t bother, because a session is really just a warm-up.
How much do they cost?
Prices vary greatly depending on where you are, who is doing it, and what area is being treated, so take any numbers you see online as a rough ballpark, not a quote. Microneedling is a more accessible option, typically running $200-$700 per session in the US. eMatrix sits higher, typically $500-$1,500 per session depending on the clinic and treatment area. Multiply either of these by the number of sessions you need and it adds up quickly, so keep the full cost of the treatment plan in mind rather than just the per-session number. The cheapest option per session is not always the cheapest option overall, and a provider that charges more but has real experience with the device is almost always worth a bargain with someone who wants it.
What is the right treatment for your specific skin problems?
If acne scars are the main villain, microneedling is for you, you want something with decades of proof behind it, or you don’t want to spend a lot of money to get good results. Works well on almost all skin types, great for uneven texture, large pores, normal skin that needs a refresh.
eMatrix is a one-stop solution for various skin concerns, including skin laxity, sun damage, dark spots, or uneven skin tone that makes your complexion look spotty and dull. It’s also really worth considering if you’ve previously been told that invasive laser treatments aren’t suitable for your skin – eMatrix is an FDA-approved treatment that works safely on a variety of skin types, including darker skin tones, which laser resurfacing often can’t say.
Can you match them?
You can do this, and honestly, the proof of doing so is pretty exciting. A 2025 RCT found that performing RF microneedling immediately after eMatrix in the same session neither improved results nor achieved healing on its own. – Significant improvement in acne scars in 70% of patients. This is not a small number. The reason they work so well together is that microneedling tackles the dermis from above while eMatrix targets the deeper dermal layers of the skin, so you reach the entire depth of the skin in one go. Not every clinic offers both, but if your clinic does and you’re struggling with stubborn blemishes, it may give you the best results – and the longest-lasting results overall.
bottom line
Both treatments are legitimate, there is real science behind both, and neither one will let you down if you choose the right treatment for the right reason. Mark: Microneedling. Dysfunction and aging: eMatrix. Both: Mix them. The only thing that will really make or break your results is who owns the device, so spend as much time checking your provider as you did reading this article.
