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Getting a base tan before summer? Dermatologists say stop.
BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM
A base tan provides roughly SPF 3 of protection. Dermatologists recommend SPF 30 every single day. Those two numbers are worth sitting with before you start “easing into” sun exposure this spring.
The logic behind the base tan feels intuitive: build up melanin gradually before summer, and your skin will be better prepared for more sun later. It sounds reasonable. But it is not supported by science.
What a tan actually is
“The idea of a base tan offering protection from sunburn is a dangerous myth,” says Hallie McDonald, MD, a board-certified dermatologist in Austin, Texas, and co-founder of ERLY. When skin darkens, it is producing melanin as a defense response to UV radiation. But that response is a marker of damage, not a signal that the skin is adapting well. “The damage is already being done,” Dr. McDonald says.
UV exposure from the sun or a tanning bed causes DNA mutations in skin cells. Over time, those mutations raise the risk of basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and melanoma. The deepening color is evidence of that process, not confirmation that the skin is building any kind of tolerance.
The cumulative math
What makes the base tan logic particularly flawed is the asymmetry. The protection it offers is negligible. The damage it causes is permanent and compounds over the years. Each session of sun exposure without adequate SPF adds to a running total that the body cannot fully reverse.
Up to 80 percent of UV rays penetrate cloud cover, which means sun damage accumulates on overcast days too, regardless of season or perceived intensity.
Broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher, applied daily and reapplied every two hours during outdoor time, is what actually intercepts UV at a meaningful level. That protection requires no pre-exposure preparation of any kind.
Getting the color without the cost
For anyone who wants a sun-kissed look heading into warmer months, Dr. McDonald recommends sunless tanners containing dihydroxyacetone (DHA), a compound that temporarily stains the top layer of skin. The cosmetic result is comparable to a light tan, with no UV exposure and no DNA damage. Tinted sunscreens offer another option for the face.
The idea that a little damage now buys you better tolerance later does not hold up in the data. A sunless tanner with DHA delivers the color without any sun exposure, and broad-spectrum SPF 30 applied daily delivers the actual protection. That combination works. A base tan does not.
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