single page flower1

DIY Homemade Natural Sunscreen Recipe

single page flower2
Ingredients and finished homemade natural sunscreen recipe with products, including jars of lotion, bowls of powders, essential oils, and beeswax, displayed on a light linen cloth near a window
Ingredients and finished homemade natural sunscreen recipe with products, including jars of lotion, bowls of powders, essential oils, and beeswax, displayed on a light linen cloth near a window

Table of Contents

Natural skincare has a way of making you stop and think.

What am I actually putting on my skin?

For sunscreen, that question matters even more.

Chemical formulas work, sure, but many people are stepping back from them. The problem is, going homemade isn’t always clear. Some natural recipes offer real protection.

Others barely scratch the surface.

Read on, and I’ll break down what a good natural sunscreen recipe actually needs.

Can a Homemade Sunscreen Really Protect Your Skin?

Sun protection factor (SPF) tells you how long you can stay in the sun before burning.

SPF 30 means 30 times longer than bare skin.

Simple enough.

But where DIY gets tricky is that you can’t test SPF at home.

A lab measures it under strict conditions. Your kitchen can’t do that. Even if your recipe uses the right ingredients, the actual protection level is anyone’s guess. There’s also a bigger point worth making.

Skincare moisturizes and nourishes. Sun protection blocks UV rays.

The two jobs are very different, and not every natural ingredient does both well.

What is UV Damage Before You Make Your Own Sunscreen

The sun sends out two types of rays that affect your skin.

UVA rays go deep.

They break down collagen, accelerate aging, and cause long-term damage, often without you even noticing.

UVB rays hit the surface.

They’re the ones that burn you on a hot afternoon.

Both cause real harm and need to be blocked. Over time, unprotected skin pays the price. Dark spots, fine lines, rough texture, and, in serious cases, skin cancer.

This isn’t scare talk. It’s just what repeated sun exposure does.

Knowing this makes choosing the right sunscreen, natural or not, a lot easier.

Ingredients Commonly Used in Natural Sunscreen Recipes

A collection of natural ingredients and tools, including a double boiler, scale, oils, and powders, are laid out on a wooden table for making homemade cosmetics

Every natural sunscreen recipe starts with a handful of key ingredients. Some protect. Some moisturize.

Here’s a clear breakdown.

Mineral-Based Protection Ingredients

Ingredient Role Per 100g batch Substitute
Zinc oxide (non-nano) Primary UV blocker reflects both UVA and UVB rays 15g–20g Titanium dioxide (10–15g)

Non-nano vs nano: Non-nano zinc oxide particles don’t absorb into the skin.

Nanoparticles are smaller and may penetrate the skin barrier. Most recipes use non-nano for safety reasons.

Oils and Butters Often Included

These ingredients improve texture and feel. They do not protect against UV rays on their own.

  • Coconut oil (30g): acts as a carrier base, adds moisture. Substitute: jojoba oil.
  • Shea butter (25g): thickens the formula and softens skin. Substitute: mango butter.
  • Beeswax (10g): adds water resistance and holds everything together. Substitute: candelilla wax (5g).

Extras that Improve the Formula

A few simple additions can improve your natural sunscreen recipe by making it easier to apply.

  • Vitamin E oil (5–10 drops): acts as a natural preservative and supports skin health. Substitute: rosehip oil.
  • Arrowroot powder (5g): Reduces zinc oxide’s white cast and improves spreadability. Substitute: tapioca starch.
  • Essential oils (optional, 5–10 drops): Lavender or frankincense are common for scent and skin benefits.

Skip if sensitive.

Ingredients that sound protective but aren’t reliable

Ingredient Common Claim The Reality
Raspberry seed oil Often said to have SPF 28–50 Based on a misquoted study, no reliable data support this.
Carrot seed oil Claimed to offer SPF 38–40 No scientific backing. It’s a good skin oil, but not a sunscreen.

Using these as your main protection is risky; they work best as skin-nourishing extras.

What You’ll Also Need

Getting the right tools makes the whole process much smoothe.

  • A double boiler: to melt butter and wax without burning them.
  • A glass jar or tin: for storing the finished sunscreen.
  • A digital scale: measuring by weight gives far more accurate results than using spoons.

Simple Natural Sunscreen Recipes

Here are tried-and-tested recipes, each using natural ingredients you can easily find.

1. Basic Zinc Oxide Sunscreen (SPF 20–30)

Ingredients for homemade natural skincare, including shea butter, beeswax, essential oil, and lavender sprigs, arranged on a rustic wooden table near a window

This is the most clear natural sunscreen recipe you can make. It uses the tiniest ingredients and works well for everyday outdoor use.

What you need:

  • Zinc oxide (non-nano): 20g
  • Coconut oil: 30g
  • Shea butter: 25g
  • Beeswax: 10g
  • Vitamin E oil: 5 drops

How to make it:

Melt shea butter, beeswax, and coconut oil together in a double boiler.

Remove from the heat and let it cool slightly. Add zinc oxide slowly and mix well. Stir in vitamin E oil, pour into a glass jar, and let it set completely before use.

Best for: Daily use, normal to dry skin.

2. Lightweight Jojoba Oil Sunscreen (SPF 15–20)

Ingredients for homemade natural skincare, including jojoba oil, white powder in a bowl, wax pellets, and a jar of cream, set on a rustic wooden surface

This recipe is great for people who find heavier sunscreens too greasy. Jojoba oil absorbs quickly and sits well under makeup.

What you need:

  • Zinc oxide (non-nano): 15g
  • Jojoba oil: 40g
  • Arrowroot powder: 5g
  • Vitamin E oil: 5 drops
  • Candelilla wax: 5g

How to make it:

  • Melt candelilla wax in a double boiler.
  • Add jojoba oil and stir until combined.
  • Cool slightly, then add zinc oxide and arrowroot powder.
  • Mix thoroughly until smooth.
  • Add vitamin E oil, pour it into a tin, and allow it to set.

Best for: Oily or combination skin, daily wear.

3. Shea Butter and Beeswax Water-Resistant Sunscreen (SPF 25–30)

Whipped body butter in a jar with raw shea butter chunks and yellow wax cubes on a rustic wooden surface against a backdrop of lush green tropical foliage

This recipe holds up better in water, making it a practical option for outdoor activities.

Beeswax creates a light barrier that slows water from washing the formula off.

What you need:

  • Zinc oxide (non-nano): 20g
  • Shea butter: 30g
  • Beeswax: 15g
  • Coconut oil: 20g
  • Lavender essential oil: 8 drops

How to make it:

Melt beeswax and shea butter together over low heat.

Add coconut oil and stir until fully combined. Remove from heat, cool slightly, and add zinc oxide. Stir well to remove any lumps, then add lavender oil.

Pour into a jar and let it cool completely before use.

Best for: Outdoor use, swimming, and normal skin.

4. Sensitive Skin Sunscreen (SPF 20)

Jar of natural body butter surrounded by raw ingredients including shea butter chunks, almonds, chamomile flowers, calendula petals, and a small dropper bottle of oil on a wooden surface

This recipe skips essential oils and keeps things as gentle as possible. It works well for people with reactive or sensitive skin.

What you need:

  • Zinc oxide (non-nano): 18g
  • Mango butter: 30g
  • Jojoba oil: 25g
  • Arrowroot powder: 5g
  • Vitamin E oil: 8 drops

How to make it:

  • Gently melt mango butter in a double boiler. Add jojoba oil and mix well.
  • Cool the mixture slightly before adding zinc oxide.
  • Add arrowroot powder and vitamin E oil.
  • Stir until completely smooth and pour into a clean jar.

Best for: Sensitive, dry, or reactive skin types.

5. Tinted Natural Sunscreen (SPF 20–25)

Jar of Cocoa Glow tinted sunscreen with a small mother-of-pearl spatula holding a sample of the product on a textured cream surface

This recipe adds a light tint that helps reduce the white cast zinc oxide leaves behind.

It also slightly evens out skin tone, making it a good everyday option.

What you need:

  • Zinc oxide (non-nano): 18g
  • Shea butter: 25g
  • Coconut oil: 25g
  • Arrowroot powder: 5g
  • Cocoa powder: 2–4g (adjust to your skin tone)
  • Vitamin E oil: 5 drops

How to make it:

Melt shea butter and coconut oil together over low heat. Remove from heat and cool slightly.

Add zinc oxide, arrowroot powder, and cocoa powder, then mix thoroughly until the color is even throughout.

Stir in vitamin E oil, pour into a jar, and let it set fully before use.

Best for: All skin types, everyday use, those who dislike white cast.

How to Apply Homemade Sunscreen the Right Way

Most people use far too little sunscreen.

You need about a teaspoon for your face and a full shot glass worth for your body.

Apply it 15 minutes before stepping outside.

Reapply every two hours, and straight after swimming or sweating. People often forget the ears, the back of the neck, the tops of the feet, and the hands.

These spots get just as much sun, so don’t skip them.

When Natural Sunscreen Recipe is Not Enough

Natural sunscreen works well for everyday use, but in some situations, more reliable protection is needed.

Knowing when to switch matters.

  • A full day at the beach means long, intense sun exposure; your homemade formula may not handle it well.
  • High UV index days (anything above 6) require SPF products that have been tested and verified.
  • Water and other outdoor sports require frequent reapplication, and homemade formulas wash off faster.
  • Children and people with a history of skin cancer need clinically tested sunscreen, no exceptions.
  • At high altitudes, UV radiation is stronger, and a DIY formula simply may not be enough.
  • A dermatologist-recommended SPF 30 or above is always the safer call for prolonged sun exposure.

Being upfront about this builds more trust than overpromising what a natural recipe can do.

Common DIY Mistakes that Reduce Effectiveness

Small mistakes can seriously weaken your sunscreen.

Using too little zinc oxide is the biggest one, going below 15g, and your protection drops sharply.

Swapping non-nano zinc for nano reduces surface coverage.

Skipping beeswax or wax altogether makes the formula wash off quickly. Measuring ingredients by spoon rather than by weight throws off the whole balance.

Storing your sunscreen in heat or direct sunlight speeds up its breakdown.

Natural vs Store-Bought Sunscreen: A Practical Comparison

Both options have their place. Here’s how they stack up side by side.

Factor Natural Sunscreen Store-Bought Sunscreen
Ingredients Simple, recognizable Often includes chemicals like oxybenzone
SPF Accuracy Cannot be verified at home Lab-tested and certified
Skin Sensitivity Gentler for most skin types Some formulas cause irritation
Water Resistance Limited, reapply more often Stronger, longer-lasting resistance
Cost Low, affordable to make Varies, can be expensive
Shelf Life 3–6 months 1–3 years
Availability Made at home, takes preparation Ready to use, widely available
White Cast Common with zinc oxide Varies by formula
Best Use Daily, low-to-mid UV exposure High UV, beach, outdoor sports

Who Should Avoid DIY Sunscreen Completely?

DIY Sunscreen is not for everyone.

For some people, using an untested formula outdoors is a real risk, not just a minor concern.

  • Children under 12 need SPF protection verified by the FDA, as their skin is far more sensitive to UV damage.
  • People with a personal or family history of skin cancer should never rely on unverified sun protection.
  • Those with active skin conditions, such as eczema or rosacea, may react poorly to DIY ingredients.
  • Pregnant women should consult a doctor before using any homemade skin formula.
  • Anyone spending long hours outdoors for work needs guaranteed, consistent protection every single day.

If you fall into any of the groups below, stick to a clinically tested product.

Safer Alternatives to Fully DIY Sunscreen

Smiling woman in a straw hat and white dress applies lotion to her arm while sitting on a rustic bench surrounded by lush, sunlit garden flowers and potted lavender

Not ready to go fully homemade?

These middle-ground options give you more control without giving up reliable protection.

Mineral-based store-bought sunscreens

Look for products with zinc oxide or titanium dioxide as the only active ingredients, clean, simple, and lab-tested.

Reef-safe certified sunscreens

These skip harmful chemicals like oxybenzone and octinoxate, making them safer for your skin and the environment.

Tinted mineral sunscreens

A great option for daily face use, they reduce white cast and often double as light coverage.

Sunscreen sticks with natural bases

Easy to apply, travel-friendly, and many now use cleaner ingredient lists without synthetic chemicals.

SPF-infused moisturizers with mineral filters

A practical everyday option that combines skincare and sun protection in one step.

Customizable sunscreen bases

Some brands sell tested SPF bases to mix with oils, offering a safer alternative between DIY and store-bought options.

How to Store and Handle Your Natural Homemade Sunscreen

Storage makes a bigger difference than most people realize.

Keep your DIY sunscreen in a dark glass jar or a plastic can, as some oils can react with the light over time.

Store it in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight.

A bathroom cabinet works, but avoid leaving it near the shower where heat and moisture build up. Most natural sunscreen recipes last 3 to 6 months. Always use a clean spatula or spoon to scoop it out.

Repeatedly dipping fingers introduces bacteria and shortens shelf life faster than anything else.

End Note: Should You Rely on a Natural Sunscreen Recipe?

A sunscreen recipe can be a smart, skin-friendly choice for everyday use.

But it works best when you understand what it can and can’t do. Use it for low-to-mid UV days, short outdoor trips, and as part of a broader skincare routine.

For high UV days, long sun exposure, or vulnerable skin, reach for a tested product.

The goal isn’t to pick one over the other; it’s to make an informed call based on your situation.

Now go make something that actually works for your skin.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ’s)

1. What Sunscreen Works Best with Malassezia?

Zinc oxide-based mineral sunscreens work best because they don’t feed Malassezia growth.

2. What Natural Things Can I Use as Sunscreen?

Non-nano zinc oxide mixed with shea butter and coconut oil offers real protection.

3. What Oils Should Be Avoided with Malassezia?

Avoid coconut oil, olive oil, and most fatty acids, as they worsen Malassezia flare-ups.

4. How to Make 100% Organic Sunscreen?

Mix non-nano zinc oxide with organic shea butter, jojoba oil, and vitamin E oil.

5. Which is the Best DIY Sunscreen?

The basic zinc oxide recipe with shea butter and beeswax gives the most reliable protection.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About the Author

Samantha Beckett writes about home and personal care, helping people create spaces and routines that feel both comfortable and intentional. Her work covers everything from simple home updates and organization tips to everyday self-care practices that fit into busy lifestyles. She believes that small, thoughtful changes - whether in your living space or daily habits can make a meaningful difference in how you feel at home and in your own skin.

Table of Contents

Related Posts

Five large jars of Nutella hazelnut spread with a white lid are prominently displayed against a background filled with assorted Ferrero candies
Read 10 min

Nutella. Just the name gets people talking. You spread it on toast, sneak it by the spoonful, and somehow the jar is half empty by the next day. It tastes...

Hands pour creamy liquid from a glass bowl into a clear pump bottle on a countertop with soap shavings and an oil jar nearby

Most store-bought body washes are packed with chemicals that strip the skin dry, and the good ones cost way too much. Making body wash at home is a smarter move...

Two dental professionals in blue scrubs and protective gear attend to a patient reclining in a modern dental office
Read 10 min

Tooth extraction is supposed to be the hard part. The recovery? That should be easy. But sometimes, the pain doesn’t fade after a few days. It gets worse. Studies suggest...

Top view of balanced AIP meals with salmon, greens, sweet potatoes, berries, and avocado on table
Read 8 min

Stomach problems. Skin flares. Fatigue that just won’t quit. If your body has been sending signals you can’t ignore, your diet might be the first place to look. The AIP...

Related Blogs

Ingredients and finished homemade natural sunscreen recipe with products, including jars of lotion, bowls of powders, essential oils, and beeswax, displayed on a light linen cloth near a window

DIY Homemade Natural Sunscreen Recipe

Natural skincare has a way of making you stop and think. What am I actually putting on my skin? For sunscreen, that question matters even...

Person doing a full body workout at home with dumbbells yoga mat and fitness equipment in a clean modern space

13 Popular Types of Workouts to Boost Your Routine

Most people stick to the same workout, week after week, and then wonder why they stop seeing results. Sound familiar? The truth is, the body...

A plate of high protein pancakes with mint garnish sits on a wooden table inside a bright cafe with large windows overlooking a busy city street

5 Customizable High Protein Pancake Recipes

Pancakes on a Sunday morning, there’s nothing quite like it. But two hours later, you’re hungry again and wondering why you even bothered. The problem...

Related Blogs

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *