REN just reformulated their cult mineral SPF. Swapped the classic zinc oxide for a “non-nano” filter — and fans are losing it.
The old version felt like spreading Elmer’s glue on your face. The new one? Actually disappears. But does it still protect? That’s the real question.
It’s REN Clean Skincare‘s Clean Screen Mineral SPF 30 Mattifying Face Sunscreen — $38 for 50ml. The claim: invisible protection that won’t make you look like a Victorian ghost.
New Filter Tech
Methylene bis-benzotriazolyl tetramethylbutylphenol (say that three times) — a UV filter that’s technically mineral-adjacent but spreads clear.
Mattifying Finish
Micro-powders that soak up oil without that chalky drag. My T-zone didn’t revolt by noon.
Blue Light Defense
They added plankton extract — sounds gross but supposedly blocks HEV light from screens.
Photo: Dimitris Chapsoulas / Unsplash
Two things stand out: no zinc means no white cast, but also no physical barrier. The hero here is a silica-coated filter that sits on skin like a soft-focus lens. And there’s a touch of vitamin C — not enough to replace your serum, but enough to brighten.
- Methylene Bis-Benzotriazolyl Tetramethylbutylphenol: Spreads invisible, no ghost face
- Silica: Sucks oil without drying you out
- Plankton Extract: Fights blue light (take that, Zoom calls)
- Glycerin: Keeps it from feeling like chalkboard chalk
Photo: Štefan Štefančík / Unsplash
First pump — it’s a thin, milky liquid. Not a paste. Absorbs in about 15 seconds. Zero smell. My face looked… normal. Like I forgot to put anything on.
Week two: I noticed my pores looked smaller. Not magic — just the silica filling them in. But here’s the weird thing: my moisturizer pilled under it on day one. Day two I skipped moisturizer entirely — and it was fine. This thing doubles as a primer.
Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash
My skin didn’t break out. Didn’t get shiny by 3pm. But I also didn’t feel as “protected” as I did with the thick zinc version — that’s a mental thing, not a real one. SPF 30 is SPF 30.
Photo: Sarah Sheedy / Unsplash
The reformulation wins. It’s not as “clean” as the original mineral purists wanted — but it actually wears like a normal sunscreen now. And that’s worth the trade-off.