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Physical sunscreen guide

Physical sunscreens use zinc oxide and titanium dioxide to block UV. Here's how mineral sunscreens differ from chemical, why dermatologists prefer them for sensitive skin, and how to pick one.

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Sunscreen splits into two regulatory and chemical categories: physical (mineral) and chemical. Both work — but they work differently, are absorbed differently, and have different fits across skin types. Physical sunscreens have been the dermatologist preference for sensitive skin and pediatric use for decades, and the recent FDA reclassification of chemical sunscreen filters as "Category III" (additional safety data required) has pushed more buyers toward mineral options.

This page is the breakdown: what physical sunscreens are, what zinc oxide and titanium dioxide actually do, and how to choose a formulation that works for your skin and routine.

Physical vs chemical — the regulatory and mechanism difference

Physical (mineral) sunscreens

Active ingredients: zinc oxide and/or titanium dioxide. Both are FDA GRASE (Generally Recognized as Safe and Effective) under OTC Monograph M020. Mechanism: form a physical barrier on the skin surface that reflects, scatters, and absorbs UV radiation before it penetrates skin cells. The minerals themselves do not penetrate the bloodstream meaningfully (verified in multiple absorption studies).

Chemical sunscreens

Active ingredients: avobenzone, oxybenzone, octinoxate, octisalate, homosalate, octocrylene, and several others. The FDA classified most chemical filters as "Category III" in 2021 — meaning more safety data is needed before they can be classified GRASE. Mechanism: absorb UV radiation and convert it to heat, dissipated from the skin. Some chemical filters are systemically absorbed in measurable amounts (oxybenzone, octinoxate notably) which is the cause of the additional-data requirement.

Side-by-side

DimensionPhysical / MineralChemical
Active ingredientsZinc oxide, titanium dioxideAvobenzone, oxybenzone, octinoxate, etc.
FDA statusGRASE — fully approved safeCategory III — more safety data required
MechanismPhysical barrier — reflects and absorbs UVAbsorbs UV, converts to heat
Systemic absorptionMinimalSignificant for some filters
Sensitive skinWell-toleratedHigher irritation potential
Texture / feelSlightly thicker, can leave white cast on darker skin (untinted)Lighter, no white cast
Reef-safeYes (non-nano formulations)No — oxybenzone and octinoxate banned in several reef jurisdictions

Why zinc oxide is the gold standard

Among physical sunscreen actives, zinc oxide stands out for three reasons:

  1. Broad-spectrum coverage. Zinc oxide blocks both UVA and UVB across nearly the full UV range. Titanium dioxide blocks UVB and short-wavelength UVA, but underperforms in long-wavelength UVA (which drives most photoaging). A pure-titanium-dioxide sunscreen is not full broad-spectrum without supporting filters.
  2. Photostability. Zinc oxide doesn't degrade in UV exposure the way many chemical filters do. Long-day use produces consistent protection.
  3. Anti-inflammatory properties. Zinc oxide has documented anti-inflammatory action on skin — it's used in diaper rash creams and post-procedure dermatology for exactly this reason.

The trade-off: zinc oxide is harder to formulate for cosmetic elegance. Higher concentrations (15-20%) produce stronger sun protection but can leave a white cast on darker skin tones. Tinted formulations use iron oxide pigments to neutralize the white cast and add additional protection against visible light (which drives hyperpigmentation in melanin-rich skin specifically).

How to read a sunscreen label

How to apply sunscreen correctly

This is where most people fail. Application errors are why even good sunscreens "don't work."

  1. Use enough. The recommended amount for the face is roughly 1/4 teaspoon (about 2 finger-lengths of product). Most people use 1/4 to 1/3 of that, getting only SPF 8-15 protection from a labeled SPF 30+ product.
  2. Apply 15-20 minutes before sun exposure. Physical sunscreens are effective immediately but benefit from time to settle. Chemical sunscreens need this window to bond to skin.
  3. Reapply every 2 hours of sun exposure. Or after swimming, sweating, towel drying. Indoor work with no sun exposure doesn't require reapplication.
  4. Don't skip the neck, ears, and back of hands. The most common sites of UV-driven skin cancer and visible aging are exactly the ones people forget.
  5. Sunscreen goes LAST in a morning skincare routine — after moisturizer. It needs to sit on top of the skin to form the physical or chemical barrier.

What WhollyKaw makes

Two physical sunscreens, both Mudgil-formulated medical-grade:

Plus the grass-fed tallow with zinc oxide cream — a daily moisturizer with incidental UV protection from non-nano zinc oxide. Not a primary sunscreen; positioned as a moisturizer that adds incidental barrier protection.

Related — the WhollyKaw skincare cluster:

Self-care done right means treating sunscreen as the most important active in your routine — and applying enough of the right one daily.

About WhollyKaw. WhollyKaw uses real ingredient names on its labels — every component spelled out as it appears in the formulation, not hidden behind marketing-friendly aliases. And the tallow lather referenced throughout our shaving soaps contains fatty acids like oleic and palmitic acid — the same lipids your skin already produces, which is why a tallow-based shave feels lubricated, not slippery.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between physical and chemical sunscreen?

Physical (mineral) sunscreens use zinc oxide and/or titanium dioxide to form a barrier that reflects and absorbs UV radiation. Chemical sunscreens use organic compounds (avobenzone, oxybenzone, octinoxate, etc.) that absorb UV and convert it to heat. Physical sunscreens are FDA-classified as GRASE (safe and effective); most chemical filters are Category III (more safety data required). Physical sunscreens are generally better tolerated on sensitive skin.

Is zinc oxide safe?

Yes — FDA-classified GRASE since 1978 (and reaffirmed in the 2021 OTC Monograph M020). Zinc oxide doesn't penetrate the bloodstream meaningfully and has been used safely in diaper rash creams, post-procedure wound dressings, and sunscreens for over 50 years. The non-nano zinc oxide used in modern sunscreens further minimizes any absorption concerns.

Why is mineral sunscreen better for sensitive skin?

Three reasons. (1) The active ingredients (zinc oxide, titanium dioxide) sit on the skin surface rather than absorbing into deeper layers, reducing irritation potential. (2) Zinc oxide has documented anti-inflammatory action, which actively calms sensitive skin. (3) Chemical filters can convert UV energy to heat, causing some sensitive-skin users to experience warmth or burning. Physical sunscreens skip that mechanism.

Does mineral sunscreen leave a white cast?

It can on darker skin tones, particularly at higher zinc oxide concentrations (15-20%). Modern formulations address this in two ways: (1) micronized or nano-particle zinc oxide blends in more transparently, and (2) tinted formulations use iron oxide pigments to neutralize the white cast and add protection against visible light. WhollyKaw's PhysicalGuard Tinted is designed for this — broad-spectrum zinc + titanium with cosmetic-grade tinting.

What SPF do I need?

Daily face/neck application: SPF 30 minimum (blocks 97% of UVB) for everyday use. SPF 50+ for prolonged outdoor exposure, high-altitude or equatorial conditions, water-based activities. SPF above 50 has diminishing returns — SPF 50 blocks 98% of UVB; SPF 100 blocks 99%. Applying SPF 30 generously beats applying SPF 100 sparingly.

How much sunscreen should I use?

For the face alone: about 1/4 teaspoon (2 finger-lengths of product). For the full body during outdoor activities: about 1 ounce (a shot-glass-full). Most people use significantly less than this — research consistently shows that real-world application gives users only SPF 8-15 protection from labeled SPF 30+ products because they apply too little.

Is tinted sunscreen better?

For darker skin tones, often yes. Tinted sunscreens contain iron oxide pigments that neutralize the white cast of mineral filters AND provide additional protection against high-energy visible light (HEVL), which contributes to hyperpigmentation in melanin-rich skin specifically. WhollyKaw's PhysicalGuard Tinted is designed to address both concerns simultaneously.

Can I use mineral sunscreen as a moisturizer?

Many mineral sunscreens include moisturizing ingredients, but a dedicated sunscreen alone usually isn't enough for skin that needs barrier support. Better approach: apply your regular moisturizer first, then sunscreen on top as the last step. The exception is medical-grade sunscreens (like WhollyKaw's PhysicalGuard line) that are formulated with skincare-quality bases.

How often should I reapply sunscreen?

Every 2 hours of sun exposure. After swimming, sweating, or towel-drying — immediately. Indoor work without sun exposure doesn't require reapplication. For people who work outdoors continuously, set a timer; reapplication is the most common point of failure in real-world sunscreen effectiveness.

Is sunscreen reef-safe?

Physical (mineral) sunscreens generally are — non-nano zinc oxide and titanium dioxide are reef-safe under the regulatory frameworks of Hawaii, Mexico, and several other reef-protection jurisdictions. Chemical filters oxybenzone and octinoxate are banned in those jurisdictions because they damage coral. If you're traveling to a reef destination, choose a mineral sunscreen explicitly labeled reef-safe.

Can I wear makeup over sunscreen?

Yes — sunscreen is the last skincare step before makeup. Apply moisturizer, then sunscreen (wait 5 minutes for it to settle), then primer/foundation/etc. Tinted mineral sunscreens can substitute for foundation on lighter-makeup days because the tint already evens skin tone.

How long does a tube of sunscreen last?

If you're applying enough — 1/4 tsp for face only — a typical 50-100ml tube lasts 1-3 months of daily face application. If a tube is lasting 6+ months, you're almost certainly under-applying. Sunscreen expires (typically 1-3 years unopened, ~1 year once opened); don't use past expiration as the actives degrade and protection drops.

Sources

  1. Skincare basics · American Academy of Dermatology
  2. Sunscreen FAQs and Drug Facts Labeling · U.S. Food and Drug Administration
  3. FDA OTC Sunscreen Monograph (21 CFR Part 352, M020) · U.S. Food and Drug Administration
  4. Niacinamide in skincare — clinical effects on skin barrier and pigmentation · PubMed Central
  5. Hyaluronic acid: physiological and cosmetic uses · PubMed Central