Updated
Updated · Grazia USA · Jul 2
Dermatologists Urge SPF 30+ Broad-Spectrum Sunscreens for Mature Skin as Hybrid Formulas Add Hydration
Updated
Updated · Grazia USA · Jul 2

Dermatologists Urge SPF 30+ Broad-Spectrum Sunscreens for Mature Skin as Hybrid Formulas Add Hydration

3 articles · Updated · Grazia USA · Jul 2

Summary

  • SPF 30 or higher with broad-spectrum coverage is the baseline recommendation for mature skin, with dermatologists saying sunscreen should now function as daily skincare rather than a standalone shield.
  • UVA protection is a key gap: experts say labels should ideally include a PA+ to PA+++ rating because UVA rays are closely tied to premature aging and skin cancer.
  • Modern formulas increasingly add hyaluronic acid, ceramides, squalane and peptides, while newer mineral and tinted options aim to reduce the chalky finish, dryness and uneven tone that once deterred users.
  • Mineral sunscreens are often favored for sensitive mature skin, but experts say chemical formulas can hold up better during extended outdoor exposure, sweat or friction; fragrance-free and water-resistant options are also advised.

Insights

With a new sunscreen filter approved after 20 years, is your current SPF truly protecting you from long-term skin aging?
Beyond UV, tinted sunscreens now fight visible light damage. Is this the new, non-negotiable standard for preventing skin discoloration?
The FDA finally approved a modern UV filter. How will this change the feel and effectiveness of sunscreens on US shelves?