Sunscreen Calculator – How Long Does Your SPF Protect You?
Enter your skin type, SPF, and current UV index – and instantly find out how long your sunscreen lasts and when you need to reapply.
Sunscreen Calculator
Health & Fitness
Check your weather app or search 'UV index [your city]'
Why this protection time?
⚕️ This calculator provides general guidance, not medical advice. Actual protection time depends on many factors (amount applied, sweating, water exposure, friction). When in doubt, reapply more often and avoid peak sun hours. Consult a dermatologist for skin concerns.
* Affiliate link – As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
* Affiliate link – As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
* Affiliate link – As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Sunscreen Protection Time by Skin Type and SPF
The calculator combines three factors: the natural protection time of your skin type (10, 20, or 30 minutes), the SPF multiplier, and a UV index correction factor. The result is reduced to two-thirds — dermatologists recommend not using the full theoretical protection time — and capped at 120 minutes, because sweat, friction, and water reduce protection regardless of SPF.
| Skin Type | SPF | UV Index | Protection Time (recommended) | Reapply After |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light | 15 | 6 | 65 min | approx. 1 hour |
| Light | 30 | 6 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Light | 50+ | 6 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Light | 30 | 8 | 100 min | approx. 1.5 hours |
| Light | 30 | 10 | 80 min | approx. 1 hour 20 min |
| Medium | 15 | 6 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Medium | 30 | 6 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Medium | 30 | 8 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Medium | 15 | 10 | 80 min | approx. 1 hour 20 min |
| Dark | 15 | 6 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Dark | 30 | 8 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
| Dark | 15 | 10 | 120 min (cap) | 2 hours |
SPF 30 vs. SPF 50 – Is Higher SPF Worth It?
A common misconception: SPF 50 does not protect twice as long as SPF 30. SPF 30 filters about 97% of UVB rays, SPF 50 about 98% — the difference in filter performance is small. The difference in protection time mainly shows up for light skin at high UV index, because the 2-hour reapply limit kicks in for most other combinations first.
| Scenario | SPF 30 | SPF 50 | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light skin, UV 6 | 120 min (cap) | 120 min (cap) | No difference |
| Light skin, UV 8 | 100 min | 120 min (cap) | +20 minutes |
| Light skin, UV 10 | 80 min | 110 min | +30 minutes |
| Medium skin, UV 6 | 120 min (cap) | 120 min (cap) | No difference |
| Medium skin, UV 10 | 120 min (cap) | 120 min (cap) | No difference |
Bottom line: SPF 50 mainly benefits light skin types at UV index ≥ 8. For medium and dark skin types, the higher factor makes no practical difference in most situations — the 2-hour reapply rule kicks in before the theoretical protection time runs out.
5 Common Sunscreen Mistakes – And How to Avoid Them
❌ "SPF 50 means I'm protected all day"
Problem: Even with SPF 50 and dark skin, you should reapply at least every 2 hours. Sweat, water, and friction reduce protection regardless of the SPF level.
✅ Fix: Use our calculator to find your exact reapply time — and actually stick to it.
❌ Apply once and forget it
Problem: Most people apply too little AND don't reapply. Dermatologists recommend 2 mg per cm² of skin — about 6 teaspoons (36 ml) for an adult's full body. Using half that amount effectively halves your protection.
✅ Fix: Apply generously, cover evenly, reapply after 2 hours — always.
❌ Skipping sunscreen on cloudy days
Problem: Up to 80% of UV radiation penetrates clouds. The UV index can still be 5–6 on overcast days — enough for a sunburn within 30–60 minutes.
✅ Fix: Always check the current UV index in your weather app, not just the sky.
❌ Thinking reapplying extends protection time
Problem: No. Reapplying restores the original protection but does not extend it. Once your recommended protection time has elapsed, reapplying three more times won't help — it's time to find shade.
✅ Fix: Reapply before your protection time runs out, not after.
❌ Assuming dark skin doesn't need sunscreen
Problem: Darker skin has a longer natural protection time (30 vs. 10 minutes), but it is not immune to UV damage. Sunburn, premature aging, and skin cancer risk affect all skin types.
✅ Fix: SPF 15–30 is usually enough for dark skin in most situations — but you still need to apply it.
Frequently Asked Questions About Sunscreen
Planning a summer cookout? Our Grilling Calculator helps you figure out the perfect amount of meat for your BBQ.
Sorting out drinks for any outdoor event? Our Party Drink Calculator gives you a complete shopping list for beer, wine, soft drinks, and ice in seconds.