What's inside
What's inside
Key Ingredients
Benefits
Concerns
Ingredients Side-by-side
Mica
Cosmetic ColorantTitanium Dioxide
Cosmetic ColorantSynthetic Fluorphlogopite
Diisostearyl Malate
EmollientDimethicone/Vinyl Dimethicone Crosspolymer
Skin ConditioningOctyldodecyl Stearoyl Stearate
EmollientDimethicone
EmollientBoron Nitride
AbsorbentPolymethylsilsesquioxane
Vinyl Dimethicone/Methicone Silsesquioxane Crosspolymer
Zinc Stearate
Cosmetic ColorantButylene Glycol
HumectantCaprylyl Glycol
EmollientCetyl Ethylhexanoate
EmollientIsopropyl Palmitate
EmollientOryza Sativa Bran Oil
EmollientGlyceryl Stearate
EmollientC12-15 Alkyl Benzoate
AntimicrobialCetearyl Alcohol
EmollientTricaprin
MaskingPhenoxyethanol
PreservativeSilica
AbrasiveTin Oxide
AbrasivePEG-100 Stearate
SurfactantChlorphenesin
AntimicrobialBenzotriazolyl Dodecyl P-Cresol
UV AbsorberPEG-40 Castor Oil
EmulsifyingBHT
AntioxidantXanthan Gum
EmulsifyingButylphthalimide
Skin ConditioningEthylhexyl Salicylate
UV AbsorberButyl Methoxydibenzoylmethane
UV AbsorberWater
Skin ConditioningIron Oxides
Sodium Cetearyl Sulfate
CleansingDisodium EDTA
Isopropylphthalimide
Skin ConditioningBisabolol
AntioxidantGlycerin
HumectantPotassium Hydroxide
BufferingMaltodextrin
AbsorbentAloe Barbadensis Leaf Juice
Skin ConditioningAloe Barbadensis Leaf Extract
EmollientArgania Spinosa Kernel Oil
EmollientButyrospermum Parkii Butter
Skin ConditioningOlea Europaea Fruit Oil
MaskingSimmondsia Chinensis Seed Oil
EmollientOctyldodecanol
EmollientNiacinamide
SmoothingRibes Nigrum Seed Oil
EmollientAcetyl Glucosamine
Skin ConditioningMorus Alba Root Extract
BleachingCeteareth-25
CleansingCamellia Sinensis Leaf Extract
AntimicrobialCentella Asiatica Extract
CleansingHelianthus Annuus Seed Oil Unsaponifiables
EmollientMorus Alba Bark Extract
Skin ConditioningPyrus Malus Fruit Extract
Skin ConditioningBehenic Acid
CleansingCaprooyl Phytosphingosine
Skin ConditioningCaprooyl Sphingosine
Skin ConditioningCardiospermum Halicacabum Flower/Leaf/Vine Extract
Skin ConditioningCeramide AP
Skin ConditioningCeramide EOP
Skin ConditioningCeramide Eos
Skin ConditioningCeramide NP
Skin ConditioningCeramide Ns
Skin ConditioningCholesterol
EmollientEthylhexylglycerin
Skin ConditioningGalactoarabinan
Glyceryl Oleate
EmollientHelianthus Annuus Seed Oil
EmollientHoney Extract
HumectantLecithin
EmollientRosmarinus Officinalis Leaf Extract
AntimicrobialRoyal Jelly Extract
Skin ConditioningTricholoma Matsutake Extract
Skin ConditioningMica, Titanium Dioxide, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Diisostearyl Malate, Dimethicone/Vinyl Dimethicone Crosspolymer, Octyldodecyl Stearoyl Stearate, Dimethicone, Boron Nitride, Polymethylsilsesquioxane, Vinyl Dimethicone/Methicone Silsesquioxane Crosspolymer, Zinc Stearate, Butylene Glycol, Caprylyl Glycol, Cetyl Ethylhexanoate, Isopropyl Palmitate, Oryza Sativa Bran Oil, Glyceryl Stearate, C12-15 Alkyl Benzoate, Cetearyl Alcohol, Tricaprin, Phenoxyethanol, Silica, Tin Oxide, PEG-100 Stearate, Chlorphenesin, Benzotriazolyl Dodecyl P-Cresol, PEG-40 Castor Oil, BHT, Xanthan Gum, Butylphthalimide, Ethylhexyl Salicylate, Butyl Methoxydibenzoylmethane, Water, Iron Oxides, Sodium Cetearyl Sulfate, Disodium EDTA, Isopropylphthalimide, Bisabolol, Glycerin, Potassium Hydroxide, Maltodextrin, Aloe Barbadensis Leaf Juice, Aloe Barbadensis Leaf Extract, Argania Spinosa Kernel Oil, Butyrospermum Parkii Butter, Olea Europaea Fruit Oil, Simmondsia Chinensis Seed Oil, Octyldodecanol, Niacinamide, Ribes Nigrum Seed Oil, Acetyl Glucosamine, Morus Alba Root Extract, Ceteareth-25, Camellia Sinensis Leaf Extract, Centella Asiatica Extract, Helianthus Annuus Seed Oil Unsaponifiables, Morus Alba Bark Extract, Pyrus Malus Fruit Extract, Behenic Acid, Caprooyl Phytosphingosine, Caprooyl Sphingosine, Cardiospermum Halicacabum Flower/Leaf/Vine Extract, Ceramide AP, Ceramide EOP, Ceramide Eos, Ceramide NP, Ceramide Ns, Cholesterol, Ethylhexylglycerin, Galactoarabinan, Glyceryl Oleate, Helianthus Annuus Seed Oil, Honey Extract, Lecithin, Rosmarinus Officinalis Leaf Extract, Royal Jelly Extract, Tricholoma Matsutake Extract
Talc
AbrasiveDiisostearyl Malate
EmollientTriethylhexanoin
MaskingHydrogenated Castor Oil Isostearate
Skin ConditioningPolyglyceryl-3 Polydimethylsiloxyethyl Dimethicone
Skin ConditioningZinc Laurate
Methylparaben
PreservativeTocopherol
AntioxidantOlea Europaea Fruit Oil
MaskingCeramide NP
Skin ConditioningButyrospermum Parkii Butter
Skin ConditioningSimmondsia Chinensis Seed Oil
EmollientMica
Cosmetic ColorantIron Oxides
CI 73360
Cosmetic ColorantAluminum Hydroxide
EmollientTitanium Dioxide
Cosmetic ColorantCI 15850
Cosmetic ColorantRosa Canina Fruit Oil
EmollientTin Oxide
AbrasiveUltramarines
Synthetic Fluorphlogopite
Talc, Diisostearyl Malate, Triethylhexanoin, Hydrogenated Castor Oil Isostearate, Polyglyceryl-3 Polydimethylsiloxyethyl Dimethicone, Zinc Laurate, Methylparaben, Tocopherol, Olea Europaea Fruit Oil, Ceramide NP, Butyrospermum Parkii Butter, Simmondsia Chinensis Seed Oil, Mica, Iron Oxides, CI 73360, Aluminum Hydroxide, Titanium Dioxide, CI 15850, Rosa Canina Fruit Oil, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite
Ingredients Explained
These ingredients are found in both products.
Ingredients higher up in an ingredient list are typically present in a larger amount.
This ingredient is also known as shea butter. It is a plant-derived extract from the nuts of the Africa shea tree and one of the most well-studied emollients.
Because it has a high concentration of fatty acids (primarily oleic, stearic, and linoleic) it is able to form a protective barrier on the skin's surface. This helps seal in moisture and prevents transepidermal water loss (TEWL).
In vitro research found an increase in skin hydration by 58% and a decrease in TEWL by 37.8% after 24 hours of applying this ingredient (pretty impressive for a single ingredient!).
Besides hydration, shea butter also contains triterpenes that have anti-inflammatory potential. In particule, lupeol cinnamate has shown the highest anti-inflammatory activity in vivo.
Shea butter also contains vitamins A and E which may contribute to antioxidant activity.
While Shea Butter has an SPF rating of about 3-4, it is not a sunscreen replacement.
This ingredient may not be fungal acne safe because its fatty acids fall within the C11-C24 range that the Malassezia yeast can metabolize.
Learn more about Butyrospermum Parkii ButterCeramide NP (formerly known as Ceramide 3) is one of the skin's naturally occurring lipids.
Since ceramides are the major lipid components of the skin, they are crucial for maintaining skin barrier and hydration. Ceramide NP most closely mirrors the dominant kind in human skin amongst ceramide subtypes.
This ceramide works by slotting into gaps within the stratum corneum's lipid matrix to limit trans-epidermal water loss (TEWL) and shield the skin against external irritants.
A study with 312 patients found that using a ceramide-containing routine for 4 weeks reduced the severity of atopic dermatitis by over 61%.
Another clinical study in subjects aged 60 and older found that a ceramide body wash and moisturizer improved skin dryness and itchy skin in 15 days.
Overall, ceramides are considered non-irritating and safety tests have found little to no observable adverse effects from using this ingredient.
Ceramide NP is usually sourced from plants (like soybean or rice bran), or produced synthetically.
Learn more about Ceramide NPDiisostearyl Malate is an emollient and most often used in lip products. It comes from isostearyl alcohol, a fatty acid, and malic acid, an AHA.
As an emollient, Diisostearyl Malate helps create a thin film on your skin to trap moisture in. This helps keep your skin soft and smooth.
Mica is a naturally occurring mineral used to add shimmer and color in cosmetics. It can also help improve the texture of a product or give it an opaque, white/silver color.
Serecite is the name for very fine but ragged grains of mica.
This ingredient is often coated with metal oxides like titanium dioxide. Trace amounts of heavy metals may be found in mica, but these metals are not harmful in our personal products.
Mica has been used since prehistoric times throughout the world. Ancient Egyptian, Indian, Greek, Roman, Aztec, and Chinese civilizations have used mica.
Learn more about MicaThis ingredient is also known as olive oil. It has been used in skincare for centuries and science largely backs up its reputation as a nourishing emollient.
The main components of olive oil are oleic acid (55-83%), linoleic acid (3.5-20%), and palmitic acid (7-20%). Oleic acid promotes skin regeneration and helps regulate inflammatory responses.
Squalene is also naturally present in olive oil and exhibits moisturizing and antioxidant properties.
The polyphenols in olive oil also show anti-aging promise; one clinical study found a measurable improvement in skin appearance after 30 days of topical serum use.
Just be aware that applying olive oil directly to skin can weaken the barrier and cause redness. One study with volunteers found even people without sensitive skin experienced a significant reduction in stratum corneum integrity and induced mild erythema.
It's best to use this ingredient as part of a carefully crafted formula (instead of putting it on skin directly from the bottle).
Because it has a 2-3 on the comedogenic scale, it is a moderate risk for acne-prone skin. However, the overall formulation of a product matters more than a few ingredients with comedogenic ratings.
This ingredient may not be fungal acne safe because of the oleic and palmitic acid content. These fall within the C11-24 fatty acid range that the Malassezia yeast can metabolize to grow.
Overall, olive oil is a well-studied and nourishing skincare ingredient.
Learn more about Olea Europaea Fruit OilJojoba oil is one of the most well-studied plant-derived ingredients in cosmetics. It is an emollient with a special structure.
Because it is made up of 97-98% wax esters, it closely mirrors the linear monoesters found in human sebum. This makes it skin compatible, non-greasy, and lightweight.
Unlike other plant oils, jojoba wax doesn't easily penetrate skin. It mostly works in the uppermost layers as an emollient. This just means it forms a light barrier on the skin to help retain moisture.
Formulations with jojoba esters up to 90% reduced transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and increased barrier recovery by 81% (outperforming bisabolol at 47%).
Besides barrier support, the science also suggests jojoba to have anti-inflammatory effects and potential applications for skin infections, aging, and wound healing.
Fun fact: Indigenous cultures have used jojoba as a moisturizer and to help treat burns for centuries.
Fungal acne: The Malassezia yeast is known to metabolize fatty acids in the C11-24 range and jojoba's dominant fatty acid components fall into this range. This ingredient may not be fungal acne safe.
Learn more about Simmondsia Chinensis Seed OilSynthetic Fluorphlogopite is the synthethic version of mica. It consists of fluorine, aluminum and silicate.
Synthetic Fluorphlogopite is used to add volume to products.
It is considered non-irritating on the skin.
Learn more about Synthetic FluorphlogopiteTin Oxide is an inorganic oxide used to add opacity and volume to a product. In nature, it is already found in mineral form. The main ore of tin is an opaque and shiny mineral called casseterite.
Tin Oxide helps remove translucency in a product, or make it more opaque. Besides adding opacity, tin oxide is used for bulking to add volume.
Titanium Dioxide (TD) is a mineral UV filter widely used in sunscreens and cosmetics.
It's one of only two UV filters officially classified as "mineral" by regulatory agencies (the other being Zinc Oxide).
A really common myth is that mineral filters work by reflecting UV light off your skin like tiny mirrors.
They don't only do that; modern research shows TD protects mostly by absorbing UV radiation, the same way chemical filters do.
When researchers measured this, reflection accounted for only about 4-5% of the protection (and less than SPF 2 on its own). The other ~95% comes from absorption: the UV photons hit the particle and their energy gets soaked up by its semiconductor band gap rather than bouncing off.
So "reflects vs. absorbs" was never really the right way to split mineral from chemical filters.
TD gives broad-spectrum protection that's strongest in the UVB and UVA-2 range and weaker in the UVA-1 range. Its UVA protection isn't quite as strong as Zinc Oxide's which is why you'll often see the two paired together.
Together, they make a solid broad-spectrum system.
TD is a great pick for sensitive, acne-prone, or redness-prone skin because it's non-irritating and chemically inert. Regulatory reviews classify it as a non-sensitizer and mild-to-non-irritant.
It's also unlikely to cause the "eye sting" some chemical filters are known for.
The main trade-off is cosmetic; TD can leave a white cast and has a thicker texture. This is why mineral sunscreens are often less cosmetically elegant than chemical or hybrid formulas (and harder to shade-match on deeper skin tones).
Formulators often use micronized or nano-sized TD to cut down on white case and improve spreadability. Smaller particles scatter less visible light so the formula looks less chalky while still filtering UV.
TD is almost always bundled with coatings like Alumina, Silica, Stearic Acid, or Dimethicone. These coatings do two important jobs:
TD can be used at up to 25% in a finished sunscreen; this is the regulatory ceiling in both the US and the EU.
In practice, the amount in any given product varies a lot depending on the target SPF and whether it's paired with other UV filters.
TD is one of the most heavily vetted sunscreen ingredients out there. It is approved as a UV filter in all major markets worldwide, including the US, EU, UK, Japan, Korea, China, Australia, and Canada.
The safety evidence is solid. There was an old worry that nano particles might absorb through skin into the body but multiple studies (including on damaged, sunburned, and UV-irradiated skin) have shown that TD stays on the surface and the layer of dead skin cells on top of everything else.
There's also no evidence of carcinogenicity, mutagenicity, or reproductive toxicity from dermal exposure of this ingredient.
For those who have seen the headline about a 2022 EU ban on TD, that was on TD as a food additive (a complete separate use from topical sunscreen).
There are ongoing questions about how nano-TD might affect marine ecosystems. As of now, there has been no conclusive evidence that any form of TD (or any other sunscreen filter) harms coral reefs or marine life.
The science is still developing and it's a space worth watching rather than packing over.
However, several destinations have reef-safety sunscreen rules that restrict certain chemical filters and steer visitors toward mineral, non-nano options. If you're traveling somewhere with these rules, a non-nano mineral sunscreen is the safe bet.
Learn more about Titanium DioxideThis ingredient is a combination of red, black, and yellow iron oxide pigments. This combination of colors is usually found in foundation, because it results in a "skin" color.
The EU typically uses CI numbers for colorants when applicable, such as CI 77489. In the US, iron oxides are regulated as color additives and "iron oxides" is the most commonly used name in US cosmetic practice.
A 2021 paper looked at skincare formulations containing iron oxides and found that they reduced transmission of blue light when measured optically. In simple terms, the pigment particles helped block or scatter part of the visible light spectrum in lab testing and the authors suggest this could translate into better protection against blue-light-related skin effects.
There is also clinical and experimental research showing that tinted products containing iron oxides can reduce visible light-induced pigmentation:
Please note, whether a product reduces visible or blue light depends on things like:
In the EU's CosIng database, iron oxides are only listed as a colorant. CosIng groups ingredients by their main cosmetic role, such as colorant, preservative, or UV filter.
Though studies say iron oxides can "attenuate blue light", they're describing an optical property and not an officially recognized cosmetic function.
So CosIng isn’t contradicting the research. It’s just classifying iron oxides by what they officially are: pigments that add color.
Learn more about Iron Oxides