That ‘reef-friendly’ label on your sunscreen? It’s basically meaningless. No regulation. Anyone can slap it on.
The real test is the ingredient list — specifically, the absence of oxybenzone and octinoxate. That’s the bare minimum.
Supergoop!‘s Clean Screen. A $38 mineral SPF 50 that promises a clear finish. The ‘clean’ and ‘reef-friendly’ claims hooked me.
SPF 50
Pure mineral (zinc oxide) protection.
Matte Finish
Claims to absorb oil, not just sit on top.
Sheer Feel
Promises no white cast. A big ask for mineral.
Photo: Ema Lalita / Unsplash
It’s a 100% zinc oxide formula. That’s the gold standard for true reef safety. The other ingredients are mostly silicones for that smooth feel.
Surprise: It uses “Zinc Oxide 20%” — that’s a high percentage, which usually means serious white cast.
- Zinc Oxide 20%: The only active. Blocks UVA/UVB.
- Dimethicone: Silicone for slip. Helps with spreadability.
- Silica: Oil-absorber. Creates the matte finish.
- Tocopherol: Vitamin E. An antioxidant.
Photo: Natallia Photo / Unsplash
Feels like velvet primer. Thick. You have to work fast — it sets down almost immediately.
Week 2 update: It pills under makeup if you rub. And on truly sweaty days? It can leave a faint, ashy residue in your eyebrows. Weird.
Photo: Jana Ohajdova / Unsplash
My skin stayed protected, zero burn. It is genuinely matte. But the ‘sheer’ claim is a stretch on medium to deep skin tones.
Photo: Jens Kreuter / Unsplash
It’s reef-safe by ingredient standards. But the ‘clean’ marketing feels like fluff. This is a performance-driven matte primer with SPF.