Chemical vs Mineral Sunscreen - A Dermatologist's Guide

Chemical vs Mineral Sunscreen: What’s Actually Better for Your Skin?

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Chemical vs Mineral Sunscreen: What’s Actually Better for Your Skin?

A Dermatologist’s Guide for choosing chemical v mineral sunscreen.

The conversation has become increasingly noisy between what is better for your skin – chemical v mineral sunscreen — often driven more by social media than science. As dermatology specialists, our role is to bring this back to evidence, safety, and what works for real skin.

Let’s break it down properly.

What’s the Difference between Mineral v Chemical Sunscreen?

Mineral (Physical) Sunscreen

Mineral sunscreens use:

  • Zinc Oxide
  • Titanium Dioxide

They sit on the surface of the skin and:

  • Reflect and scatter UV radiation
  • Provide broad-spectrum protection immediately on application

Mineral Sunscreen is Best For:

  • Sensitive or reactive skin
  • Rosacea and post-procedure skin
  • Those who prefer minimal ingredient formulas

mineral sunscreen 

Chemical Sunscreen

Chemical sunscreens use filters such as:

  • Avobenzone
  • Oxybenzone
  • Octocrylene

They work by:

  • Absorbing UV radiation
  • Converting it into heat, which is then released from the skin

Best for:

  • Daily wear under makeup
  • Those who prefer lightweight, invisible formulas

posey

 

The Safety Question on Sunscreens

This is where most of the confusion sits.

One study shows some potential hormone interruptions with benzophenone derivatives, but stresses that more research is needed, and the risk of UV outweighs the potential disruption. Another recent review of evidence at Stanford shows – no definitive link has been established in humans between sunscreen and endocrine disruption.

It is important to note that one chemical has been widely studied in marine life: oxybenzone (benzophenone-3) has shown to be damaging to corals and impacts the growth and reproduction of marine life. We have checked our sunscreen recommendations and none list oxybenzone as an ingredient.

Oxybenzone.svg - No.23 Skin

Regulatory bodies and dermatology consensus remain clear:

  • Approved sunscreen ingredients are safe for use
  • The risk of UV damage far outweighs any theoretical risk:
    • A randomized controlled trial in Australia found that daily use of sunscreen reduced the incidence of melanoma by 50%, while a Norwegian study found that using at least 15 SPF sunscreen lowered melanoma risk by 30%. Other studies have shown that regular sunscreen use can reduce the risk of other skin cancers, including squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinomas and keratinocyte carcinomas.

melanoma picture

 

So… Which Sunscreen Should You Choose?

It depends on your skin and your preference, and importantly – choose one that you will actually use.

Choose mineral sunscreen if you:

  • Have sensitive, acne-prone, or rosacea-prone skin
  • Are post-laser, peel, or active treatment
  • Prefer a more “minimal” formulation approach

Our dermatologists recommend the following sunscreens for sensitive skin –

Heliocare Mineral Tolerance Fluid
Eucerin Mineral Sunscreen

mineral sunscreen

Choose chemical sunscreen if you:

  • Want a cosmetically elegant, invisible finish
  • Struggle with consistency (this matters more than type)
  • Wear SPF daily under makeup

Our favourites that the dermatologists recommend are:

Acnimat (for breakout prone skin)

La Roche Posay Anthelios for general use.

best spf for acne prone skin

 

What Actually Matters More Than Type

This is the part most people overlook.

The best sunscreen is:

  • SPF 30 or higher
  • Broad-spectrum (UVA + UVB)
  • Applied daily/every couple of hours and consistently

 

Our Clinical Perspective

At No. 23 Skin, we take a pragmatic, evidence-led approach.

  • We recommend both mineral and chemical sunscreens
  • We tailor advice based on skin condition, lifestyle, and compliance

If a patient is unsure, we often guide them towards:

  • Mineral for treatment phases
  • Chemical for long-term daily adherence

chemical v mineral sunscreen

Final Thought

The real risk isn’t choosing the “wrong” sunscreen.

It’s not wearing one at all.

If you’re worried about your skin, need skincare advice, or if it is time for a full body skin check – then get in touch and we will support your skin for the long term.

Helen & Dr Cherry
CoFounders
No. 23 Skin
02039411815

no. 23 skin

Disclaimer

This content is provided for informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. It should not be used to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition, nor should it replace consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. Individual needs and responses to skincare products can vary, and readers are encouraged to seek personalised advice from a dermatologist or other appropriately qualified clinician before making decisions about their skin health or treatment.

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