If you have an ordinary wart and want to treat it at home, you have three real choices: salicylic acid, a freezing kit, or a precision plasma pen. They are not interchangeable. Each one suits different warts, and the right pick depends on which subtype you have and where it is. Here is the honest comparison, including the cases where each method wins.
All three methods treat a wart caused by HPV. For the full background on the virus and subtypes, see the warts pillar guide.
Key takeaways
No single method wins everywhere. The right pick depends on the wart subtype.
- Salicylic acid is cheap and safe but slow, taking weeks of daily use.
- Freezing kits suit deep plantar warts but are hard to aim and can damage healthy skin.
- A precision plasma pen treats common, flat, and filiform warts in about 5 minutes per spot.
- Precision is the 2026 difference: treating a point, not an area, protects surrounding skin.
- Plantar warts and genital warts are the cases to route to freezing or a doctor.
The three at-home wart removal methods in 2026
Salicylic acid
Salicylic acid is the oldest at-home route. You apply it daily, and it slowly dissolves the wart layer by layer. Per NIH MedlinePlus, it is a standard first-line option. Its strength is its safety and low cost. Its weakness is patience: it can take many weeks of daily application, and many people quit before it finishes.
Cryotherapy (freezing kits)
At-home freezing kits mimic the liquid nitrogen a clinic uses, at lower power. They can clear common warts and are often the best home option for plantar warts, which sit deep in the sole. Their weakness is aim and collateral damage: it is easy to freeze healthy skin around the wart, and repeat attempts are common.
Precision plasma pen
The newest at-home approach directs plasma energy to the wart tissue itself, so the raised growth is treated precisely at the source without spreading across healthy skin. This is the method built into the OcuraLife Plasma Pen. It treats a wart in about 5 minutes and runs at 9 power settings.
Where each method came from
Acid and freezing are home adaptations of long-standing clinical treatments. The precision plasma pen brings the targeting principle of in-office electrosurgery into a controllable home device, which is what changed for at-home users in recent years.
What changed in 2026: precision at home
The reason this comparison is worth rewriting now is precision. The older home methods treat an area; the plasma pen treats a point. For warts that sit on healthy skin (common, flat, filiform), being able to direct energy to the wart and not its surroundings is the difference between a clean result and an irritated patch. The American Academy of Dermatology emphasizes protecting surrounding skin during any wart treatment, and precision is how you do that at home.
Plasma pen vs cryotherapy vs salicylic acid
How the OcuraLife pen works on a wart
The pen delivers plasma energy at low power to the wart, treating the raised tissue directly so the skin can renew. The 9 power settings let you match intensity to a thin filiform wart versus a thick common wart. For the step-by-step routine, see our warts removal at home guide.
Day 0
5-minute treatment
Energy is directed to the wart. A small protective scab forms.
Day 3 to 7
Scab lifts off
The scab does its job and falls away on its own. Do not pick it.
Week 2 to 3
Skin renews
The area renews. Stubborn warts can need a second pass.
Which method is right for you
This is the honest part. No single method wins everywhere.
If you have common, flat, or filiform warts
These sit on healthy skin and benefit most from precision. The plasma pen is the strongest fit: fast, targeted, and reusable across the cluster of small warts many people have. Identify your subtype first with our identification guide.
If you have plantar warts
Plantar warts are pressed deep into the sole and are the one subtype where cryotherapy often has the edge, because freezing reaches depth. Very stubborn plantar warts, or any foot wart if you have diabetes or poor circulation, are worth a doctor visit rather than any home method.
If you have many small warts
For a face or hands dotted with flat warts, a reusable, precise tool you can apply spot by spot is more practical than a single-use acid product or a limited freezing kit.
Match the method to the wart. Precision wins on healthy skin; depth wins on the sole; a doctor wins on anything in doubt.
When to skip home treatment entirely
See a dermatologist if
- The growth is in the genital area.
- The growth bleeds on its own, grows, or changes color.
- The growth looks unlike a typical wart, or you are unsure what it is.
- You have diabetes or circulation problems with a foot wart.
Whatever method you choose, treat warts carefully because they spread: see our guide on whether warts are contagious. For common, flat, and filiform warts in reachable spots, the OcuraLife Plasma Pen is the precise, reusable at-home choice.
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The OcuraLife Plasma Pen is built for this
Targets the wart tissue precisely at the source. Adjustable settings across 9 levels. A scab forms, falls off on its own, and the skin renews.
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