Most small bumps on the skin are benign and fit into one of four categories: a pimple, a cyst, a benign surface lesion (like a skin tag, milia, cherry angioma, or sebaceous hyperplasia), or something that needs a clinician to evaluate. The categories have different textures, different behaviors, and very different treatment paths. A pimple resolves on its own in days. A cyst does not, should not be squeezed, and often needs professional care. A confirmed-benign surface lesion like a skin tag or milia can be treated at home. Anything painful, growing, or changing in appearance warrants a dermatologist visit, not a home remedy.
For the broader guide to reading your spots, including the full range of what a new mark can mean, see our should I worry about this spot overview guide.
Key takeaways
A pimple, a cyst, and a benign surface lesion are three very different things with three very different treatment paths.
- A pimple is follicular and surface-level. It resolves in days on its own.
- A cyst is a pocket beneath the skin. Do not squeeze it. It needs professional care if it is growing, painful, or inflamed.
- Benign surface lesions (skin tags, milia, cherry angiomas, sebaceous hyperplasia) are stable, do not resolve on their own, and are treatable at home once confirmed.
- Anything painful, growing, bleeding without trauma, or changing in shape or color belongs in a dermatologist's office, not a home treatment routine.
- When in doubt: see a professional. The cost of a skin check is low. The cost of treating the wrong thing is not.
Does it look like a pimple? Start here.
A true pimple is a follicular lesion rooted in a pore. It is red, may have a white head, tends to appear in clusters during breakouts, and usually resolves within 5 to 10 days. Pimples are soft when pressed, come and go with predictable patterns, and do not feel like a hard lump beneath the surface.
If the bump appeared overnight, read our guide to a spot that suddenly appeared for more context on what drives sudden new marks.
When it stops being a pimple: a bump that looks similar but lasts more than two weeks, keeps coming back in the exact same spot, or has a hard or rubbery feel beneath the skin is probably not a pimple. The most common look-alike that gets misidentified as a pimple is a cyst.
Four types that get confused most often
Pimple (acne lesion)
Soft, follicular, tied to the pore, resolves in days. Surface-level. Treating with a warm compress or gentle spot treatment is reasonable. Squeezing a large inflamed one can push bacteria deeper and lead to a longer mark than leaving it alone, but the lesion itself is a surface process.
Cyst (epidermoid or sebaceous cyst)
A cyst is a closed pocket beneath the skin, usually filled with keratin or fluid. It sits below the surface, moves slightly when pressed, and does not have a visible pore connection at the top. Cysts are often painless when small, but can become painful and inflamed if the sac ruptures internally.
Do not squeeze a cyst. Squeezing does not empty the sac. It compresses it and increases the risk of rupture below the surface, which causes more inflammation, more swelling, and a longer recovery. A cyst that is growing, painful, or has ruptured belongs in a dermatologist's office. Per the American Academy of Dermatology, persistent lumps that do not resolve like a normal pimple should be evaluated by a clinician. A cyst that is painful, growing, or inflamed is not a candidate for at-home treatment of any kind. See a clinician that same week.
For spots that feel like a movable lump and keep coming back, see our guide to a spot that hurts for more on when a recurring painful bump needs professional evaluation.
Benign surface lesions (skin tags, milia, cherry angiomas, sebaceous hyperplasia)
These are the category most commonly mistaken for pimples or cysts when people first notice them. Per NIH MedlinePlus, most small, stable, non-changing skin growths in adults are benign.
- Skin tags are soft, flesh-colored growths attached by a narrow stalk. They do not drain, do not have a head, and do not resolve on their own. Very common on the neck, underarms, and groin. Benign.
- Milia are tiny white or yellowish bumps, usually 1 to 2 mm, that sit just below the skin surface. They are common under the eyes and on the cheeks. They do not squeeze out like a pimple because there is no pore opening. Benign.
- Cherry angiomas are small red or bright-pink domed spots, usually 1 to 5 mm, made of dilated blood vessels. Very common after age 30. They bleed easily if scratched but are not dangerous. Benign.
- Sebaceous hyperplasia are flesh-colored or yellowish domed bumps, usually 2 to 4 mm, with a small dimple in the center. Common on the forehead, nose, and cheeks after 40. Benign.
Something that needs evaluation
A bump that does not fit any of the above profiles, or that shows any of the warning signs listed in the next section, belongs in the "see a dermatologist" category, not the "treat at home" category.
Signs that mean see a doctor, not treat at home
The firm rule: when in doubt, see a professional
This section is the most important one in the article. Per the Mayo Clinic, any lesion that is changing in appearance, bleeding without cause, or failing to follow an expected healing timeline should be assessed by a clinician. This applies even if the bump looks small and harmless.
See a dermatologist if
- The bump is painful, even without touching it.
- The bump is growing over days or weeks.
- The bump bleeds without trauma or repeatedly bleeds when touched lightly.
- The bump has an irregular border, mixed colors, or an asymmetric shape.
- The bump is deep, hard, and feels like it is under the skin rather than on it.
- The bump does not behave like a normal pimple (resolving within a couple of weeks).
- You are not confident in what the bump is.
Cysts in particular: do not self-treat
A lump that feels like a movable, rubbery pocket under the skin and is not resolving should not be self-treated. If it is inflamed, red, and growing, see a dermatologist the same week. Do not attempt at-home removal with a needle, a pen device, or anything else. Cysts require professional care because the entire sac must be addressed, not just the surface. A pen device treats surface tissue only and cannot address a subcutaneous sac.
For spots that are red and not resolving, see when a red spot means something more. For bumps that return to the same spot repeatedly, see our guide to a spot that keeps coming back.
The cost of a quick skin check is low. The cost of assuming something is benign when it is not is much higher.
If the spot is a confirmed surface lesion: what comes next
Confirming the lesion first
If you have ruled out a cyst, confirmed the bump is small, stable, surface-level, and benign (a skin tag, milia, cherry angioma, or sebaceous hyperplasia), at-home treatment is a real option. The confirmation step is not optional. A plasma pen is a surface tool designed for tissue-level work on confirmed-benign surface lesions only. It is not appropriate for cysts, deep lumps, or any bump you are not certain about.
How a plasma pen works for confirmed surface lesions
For these confirmed-benign surface lesions, a plasma pen is the at-home method that works at the tissue level. A 5-minute treatment delivers plasma energy precisely to the lesion. A small scab forms and falls off on its own between Day 3 and Day 7. The skin clears over Week 2 to 3. The pen has 9 power settings to calibrate for the size and location of the lesion.
Day 1
Treat and scab forms
A 5-minute treatment per lesion. A small protective scab appears the same day. Healing patches cover friction points.
The route: confirm the lesion is benign and surface-level first. Then see confirmed it is benign? here is the at-home next step for the full procedure guide.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about telling pimples, cysts, and benign skin bumps apart.
Quick answers to what readers ask most
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The bottom line
Most bumps fall into a recognizable pattern once you know what to look for. A pimple resolves in days. A cyst is a deeper structure that needs professional care, not squeezing. Benign surface lesions like skin tags, milia, cherry angiomas, and sebaceous hyperplasia are common, stable, and treatable at home once confirmed. Anything painful, growing, or changing in shape or color belongs in a dermatologist's office. When in doubt: see a professional.
For the full context on evaluating a new spot, see our should I worry about this spot overview guide. For spots that appeared suddenly, see a spot that suddenly appeared. For spots that will not stop itching, see our guide on a spot that itches and will not stop. For confirmed-benign spots and what to do next, see confirmed it is benign? here is the at-home next step.
Authoritative sources referenced in this article: the American Academy of Dermatology, the Mayo Clinic, and NIH MedlinePlus Skin Conditions.
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Once you have confirmed the spot is a benign surface lesion, the OcuraLife Plasma Pen handles it in a 5-minute treatment. Clear skin visible in 2 to 3 weeks. Nine power settings, single-use sterile tips.
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