BackgroundThe skin microbiota is known to be imbalanced in acne vulgaris, but the changes occurring during the early stages of acne onset remain poorly described.ObjectivesTo characterize the skin microbiome of subclinical stages of acne in adults and adolescents.MethodsThe composition and diversity of the microbiota from non‐lesional skin on the forehead of subjects with mild‐to‐moderate acne were compared to the ones from non‐acne subjects. Analyses of skin swab samples were performed using high‐throughput sequencing of the V1–V3 regions of the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene, the tuf gene fragment of Staphylococcus species and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS1) region of the fungal rRNA gene to determine the relative abundance, alpha‐diversity and beta‐diversity of bacteria and fungi.ResultsCompared with non‐acne subjects, acne subjects had a higher abundance of Cutibacterium (72.4% vs. 57.8%) and lower abundances of Corynebacterium (2.8% vs. 4.8%) and Streptococcus (1.4% vs. 3.2%). Bacterial alpha‐ and beta‐diversity indices also differed significantly between the two groups, reflecting differences in richness, evenness, abundance and phylogenetic distance between bacterial populations. Differences were also observed at the level of Staphylococcus species: S. capitis was predominant in skin samples from non‐acne subjects (46.7%), whereas S. epidermidis was the most abundant Staphylococcus species in non‐lesional forehead skin areas of acne subjects (44.2%). Conversely, no significant between‐group differences were found for fungi, with Malasseziales being the predominant order in both subject groups.ConclusionDysbiosis was observed very early in subclinical acne stages of the forehead skin, with the overall abundance, richness and evenness of the bacterial population being lower in acne than in non‐acne skin samples. Dysbiosis was also found at the level of Staphylococcus species. The development of acne lesions could therefore be prevented by using a skin care product that rebalances facial skin microbiota at very early stages.