Nicole Herbig never had acne as a teenager. While all her friends were dealing with , she thought she had gotten by "scotch-free," until she turned 19 years old. "I got acne, and it wasn't just traditional acne — it was severe, adult-onset ," she tells PS.

It didn't start slow with an occasional pimple here and there; seemingly overnight, her face was covered. "Nothing I did ever really helped to make it better," she says. A dermatologist recommended Accutane, a , but she was hesitant.

The sounded scary, and it seemed everyone had an opinion on it, which she says "was really anxiety-inducing to me." Up until that point, though, she had spent hundreds of dollars on over-the-counter topicals, prescription creams, and natural remedies. So three years later, she went on Accutane.

"That absolutely changed my life." She stayed on the medication for six months. During that period, Herbig was no longer spending money on acne products that didn't work, but the decision meant she would have to account for visits to her dermatologist and prescription costs.

While her treatment plan was effective, it wasn't cheap. Even though she's now off the medication, she wouldn't say her acne is "cured" exactly. "Even now, I sometimes don't even have a handle on it, to be totally honest.

" But it certainly helped. For the rest of the year, she relied on over-the-counter treatments, plus monthly facials, to keep her breakouts in check. Here's the full cost breakdown.

Treating acne Content creator Ne.