SPF, PA and UV: Understanding the Differences in Sun Protection

SPF, PA and UV: Understanding the Differences in Sun Protection

KoreanCare

SPF measures UVB protection (sunburn), PA measures UVA protection (aging). Both ratings are required for comprehensive sun defense — SPF50+ blocks 98% of UVB, PA++++ provides maximum UVA shielding.

Sun protection labels often display multiple ratings — SPF50+, PA++++, "broad-spectrum" — without explaining what these measurements actually quantify. SPF (Sun Protection Factor) measures protection against UVB radiation that causes sunburn. PA (Protection Grade of UVA) measures protection against UVA radiation that penetrates deeper, causing photoaging and DNA damage. Understanding both systems is essential because comprehensive sun protection requires blocking both wavelength ranges.

This article explains the physics of UV radiation, how SPF and PA ratings are measured, why Korean sunscreens emphasize PA++++ protection, and which formulations provide maximum defense for sensitive or reactive skin. The goal is evidence-based sun protection — not marketing claims.

The UV Spectrum: Three Wavelengths, Different Damage

Ultraviolet radiation divides into three wavelength ranges based on energy level and penetration depth. Each range causes specific types of damage:

🔴
UVA
320-400 nm
Longest wavelength. Penetrates through clouds, glass, and deep into dermis. Causes photoaging, pigmentation, immunosuppression. Present year-round.
🟠
UVB
280-320 nm
Medium wavelength. Absorbed by atmosphere and glass. Penetrates epidermis. Causes sunburn, direct DNA damage. Intensity peaks 10AM-4PM.
UVC
100-280 nm
Shortest wavelength. Completely absorbed by ozone layer. Does not reach Earth's surface. Not relevant for sunscreen.

UVA: The "aging" ray

UVA accounts for 95% of UV radiation reaching Earth's surface. Its longer wavelength (320-400 nm) penetrates glass, clouds, and epidermis, reaching the dermis where collagen and elastin reside. UVA generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that damage these structural proteins indirectly through oxidative stress rather than direct DNA absorption.

UVA further divides into UVA1 (340-400 nm) and UVA2 (320-340 nm). UVA1 penetrates deepest and is primarily responsible for photoaging: collagen degradation, elastin fragmentation, melanocyte activation (pigmentation), and immunosuppression. UVA2 overlaps with UVB in causing direct DNA damage and contributing to skin cancer risk.

Critical characteristic: UVA intensity remains relatively constant throughout the day and year, passing through clouds and glass. This means cumulative UVA exposure occurs even on cloudy days, during commutes through car windows, and in indoor environments near windows. Without UVA protection, aging damage accumulates invisibly over decades.

UVB: The "burning" ray

UVB accounts for 5% of UV radiation but causes the majority of visible acute damage — sunburn. Its medium wavelength (280-320 nm) carries more energy than UVA, allowing direct absorption by DNA. This creates thymine dimers (linked DNA bases) that, if unrepaired, lead to mutations and skin cancer.

UVB penetrates only to the epidermis but triggers immediate inflammatory response: redness, pain, peeling. This acute damage is why SPF (which measures UVB protection) became the standard sun protection metric — burning is visible feedback. However, focusing only on preventing sunburn ignores the deeper, cumulative damage from UVA.

UVB intensity varies dramatically by time of day (peaks 10AM-4PM when sun is high), season (3x higher in summer), latitude (increases near equator), and altitude (increases 4% per 300m elevation). Glass blocks most UVB, so indoor UVB exposure is minimal unless near open windows.

SPF: Measuring UVB Protection

SPF (Sun Protection Factor) quantifies how much longer skin can be exposed to UVB before developing minimal erythema dose (MED) — the redness threshold. The measurement is comparative: SPF30 means it takes 30 times longer to reach MED compared to unprotected skin.

How SPF is measured

Testing protocol standardized by FDA and ISO involves applying 2 mg/cm² of sunscreen to subjects' backs, waiting 15 minutes, then exposing small areas to measured doses of UVB from a solar simulator. After 24 hours, the MED with sunscreen divided by MED without sunscreen gives SPF rating.

Critical limitation: 2 mg/cm² is substantially more than most people apply (average 0.5-1.0 mg/cm²). This means real-world SPF is often 1/4 to 1/2 of labeled SPF. A product labeled SPF50 might provide actual SPF12-25 protection at typical application amounts.

SPF numbers and UVB blocking percentage

SPF is not linear with blocking percentage. The relationship follows this formula:

  • SPF15: Blocks 93.3% of UVB (allows 6.7% through)
  • SPF30: Blocks 96.7% of UVB (allows 3.3% through)
  • SPF50: Blocks 98.0% of UVB (allows 2.0% through)
  • SPF100: Blocks 99.0% of UVB (allows 1.0% through)

Doubling SPF does not double protection — going from SPF30 to SPF60 only increases blocking from 96.7% to 98.3% (additional 1.6%). However, this matters because skin damage is cumulative. Reducing UVB penetration from 3.3% to 1.6% (a 50% reduction in exposure) over decades makes measurable difference in photoaging and cancer risk.

Why SPF50+ is the Korean standard

Korean sunscreens typically feature SPF50+ (the + indicates SPF above 50, up to 100+) because: (1) Most people under-apply, so higher rated SPF compensates for thin application, (2) SPF50+ provides meaningful improvement over SPF30 even with proper application, (3) Korean regulatory testing is rigorous, ensuring labeled SPF is reliable. Western "SPF30 is enough" advice assumes perfect 2 mg/cm² application — unrealistic in practice.

PA: Measuring UVA Protection

PA (Protection Grade of UVA) is the Japanese/Korean rating system quantifying UVA defense. Unlike SPF's clear numerical meaning, PA uses + symbols based on PPD (Persistent Pigment Darkening) measurements.

PPD: The UVA measurement method

PPD measures how much UVA exposure is required to create persistent pigmentation (lasting 2-4 hours) compared to unprotected skin. Test subjects receive measured UVA doses through sunscreen film, then pigmentation is assessed 2-4 hours later (after immediate tanning fades but before delayed melanin production).

PPD rating indicates UVA protection factor similar to how SPF indicates UVB protection: PPD10 means it takes 10 times more UVA to cause persistent darkening compared to unprotected skin.

PA rating scale

PA Rating PPD Value UVA Protection Level Recommended Use
PA+ PPD 2-4 Minimal Indoor with minimal sun exposure
PA++ PPD 4-8 Moderate Brief outdoor activities (<1 hour)
PA+++ PPD 8-16 High Extended outdoor exposure (1-3 hours)
PA++++ PPD 16+ Extreme Prolonged outdoor activities (3+ hours), daily anti-aging defense

Why PA++++ matters for anti-aging

UVA causes 80% of visible aging (wrinkles, loss of elasticity, pigmentation) yet is often under-protected. Many Western sunscreens achieve "broad-spectrum" designation (covering UVA2 range 320-340 nm) but provide inadequate UVA1 protection (340-400 nm) — the range most responsible for deep dermal damage.

PA++++ ensures PPD 16+ coverage across full UVA spectrum including UVA1. For anti-aging focused skincare, PA++++ is non-negotiable. SPF50 prevents sunburn, PA++++ prevents premature aging.

Korean Sunscreens: SPF50+ PA++++ Formulations

Mary & May Cica Soothing Sun Cream SPF50+ PA++++ — Chemical Filters for Sensitive Skin

The Mary & May Cica Soothing Sun Cream achieves SPF50+ PA++++ through four chemical (organic) UV filters:

  • Diethylamino Hydroxybenzoyl Hexyl Benzoate (Uvinul A Plus): UVA filter covering 320-400 nm with peak absorption at 354 nm. Photostable, high extinction coefficient (absorbs UV efficiently).
  • Ethylhexyl Triazone (Uvinul T 150): UVB filter covering 280-320 nm with peak absorption at 314 nm. Exceptional photostability prevents degradation under UV exposure.
  • Methylene Bis-Benzotriazolyl Tetramethylbutylphenol (Tinosorb M): Broad-spectrum filter covering both UVA and UVB (280-400 nm). Hybrid organic-inorganic structure provides both absorption and reflection. Photostable and free radical scavenger.
  • Diethylhexyl Butamido Triazone (Iscotrizinol): UVB filter with tail into UVA2 range. Highly photostable, works synergistically with other filters to boost SPF.

This four-filter combination provides comprehensive 280-400 nm coverage without gaps. Chemical filters absorb UV energy and convert it to heat, then release it from skin. The lightweight formula absorbs without white cast — ideal for daily wear.

The formulation adds 10,000 ppm F-CICA Complex: seven Centella asiatica derivatives (centella root extract, centella leaf extract, centella extract, asiaticoside, madecassoside, asiatic acid, madecassic acid) fermented with Saccharomyces for enhanced penetration. Centella's triterpenes reduce UV-induced inflammation, supporting barrier repair after sun exposure. Niacinamide (concentration not specified, likely 2-4%) inhibits melanosome transfer, preventing post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation from UV damage. The formulation is vegan, reef-safe (no oxybenzone, octinoxate), EWG green grade ingredients.

Round Lab Birch Juice Moisturizing Sun Cushion SPF50+ PA++++ — Physical Filters in Portable Format

The Round Lab Birch Juice Moisturizing Sun Cushion achieves SPF50+ PA++++ through physical (mineral) UV filters:

  • Zinc Oxide: Broad-spectrum coverage 290-400 nm. Reflects and scatters UV radiation rather than absorbing it. Photostable (does not degrade), reef-safe, non-irritating.
  • Titanium Dioxide: Primarily UVB coverage with some UVA2 protection (280-340 nm). Less effective at UVA1. Works synergistically with zinc oxide to achieve full broad-spectrum protection.

Physical filters create a barrier on skin surface that reflects UV like microscopic mirrors. The non-nano particle size (>100 nm) prevents penetration into skin but creates slight white cast — the cushion format minimizes this through tinted formulation.

The cushion contains 1,045 ppm Betula Platyphylla Japonica Juice (birch sap from Inje highland, 800m elevation). Birch sap provides 17 amino acids, minerals (manganese, calcium, magnesium, potassium, zinc), enzymes, proteins — supporting barrier function under UV stress. Sodium hyaluronate + hyaluronic acid provide multi-weight hydration. Patented cooling ingredients (laminaria japonica extract, ulmus davidiana root extract, aloe barbadensis leaf extract, viola mandshurica flower extract, dioscorea japonica root extract) create refreshing sensation and reduce UV-induced inflammation.

The cushion format (15g) facilitates easy reapplication throughout the day — the most critical factor in maintaining SPF protection. However, small size means frequent replacement compared to 50ml tube formats.

Benton Airfit UV Defense Sun Cream SPF50+ PA++++ — Lightweight Chemical Formula for Daily Wear

The Benton Airfit UV Defense Sun Cream uses the same four chemical filters as Mary & May: Diethylamino Hydroxybenzoyl Hexyl Benzoate (UVA), Ethylhexyl Triazone (UVB), Methylene Bis-Benzotriazolyl Tetramethylbutylphenol (broad), Diethylhexyl Butamido Triazone (UVB). This combination is becoming standard in Korean SPF50+ PA++++ formulations due to photostability and comprehensive coverage.

Benton's differentiation comes through soothing actives: Centella Asiatica Extract provides 4-CICA triterpenes (madecassoside, madecassic acid, asiaticoside, asiatic acid), Panthenol (provitamin B5) supports barrier repair, Dipotassium Glycyrrhizate (from licorice) provides anti-inflammatory action, Tocopherol (vitamin E) acts as antioxidant against UV-generated free radicals.

Niacinamide is included for post-UV brightening. The "airfit" designation refers to ultra-lightweight texture that absorbs instantly without residue — weight approximately 50ml tube but feels like <10ml in application. No white cast, no pilling under makeup. Vegan, European clinical testing certified, EWG green grade UV filters (excludes OMC/octinoxate).

Soosul Deep Vitality Moisture Cream — Antioxidant Support Under Sunscreen

The Soosul Deep Vitality Moisture Cream is not sunscreen but functions as antioxidant-rich moisturizer worn under SPF products. Its 5% Phellinus Linteus Extract (SangHwang mushroom) provides polyphenols and beta-glucans that neutralize reactive oxygen species generated by UV exposure that penetrates sunscreen.

Even with SPF50+ PA++++, approximately 2% of UVB and some UVA penetrates. This residual UV generates oxidative stress in skin cells. Phellinus Linteus has been shown in studies to have antioxidant capacity superior to ascorbic acid on a per-weight basis. The extract also inhibits tyrosinase (reducing post-UV pigmentation) and supports collagen synthesis (countering UV-induced MMP activation).

Additional antioxidants: Tocopheryl Acetate (vitamin E), Portulaca Oleracea Extract (purslane, high in omega-3 and vitamin C), Daucus Carota Sativa Root Extract (carrot, beta-carotene provitamin A). Hyaluronic acid provides hydration that supports even sunscreen distribution. The cream should be applied 30 minutes before sunscreen to allow full absorption, creating an antioxidant foundation layer.

Reapplication: The Most Critical Factor

No sunscreen maintains protection all day. The "reapply every 2 hours" guideline exists because:

  • Mechanical removal: Touching face, sweating, swimming removes product regardless of "water-resistant" claims (which only guarantee 40-80 minutes protection in water).
  • Chemical filter degradation: Some filters (avobenzone, octinoxate) degrade under UV despite photostabilizers. Modern filters (Uvinul A Plus, Tinosorb M) are more stable but still lose efficacy over time.
  • Uneven initial application: Most people miss spots (hairline, ears, eyelids). Reapplication provides second layer that covers missed areas.
  • Insufficient amount: To achieve labeled SPF, 2 mg/cm² is required (approximately ¼ teaspoon for face). Most apply 0.5-1.0 mg/cm². Reapplication adds additional protective layer.

For makeup wearers, Round Lab Sun Cushion enables reapplication without disturbing makeup — pat over foundation every 2-3 hours. For no-makeup days, Benton or Mary & May tubes allow straightforward reapplication. The inconvenience of reapplication is why many prefer cushion formats despite higher cost per milliliter.

Physical vs Chemical Filters: Which Is Better?

The physical vs chemical debate is oversimplified. Both filter types have advantages:

Physical (Mineral) Filters: Zinc Oxide, Titanium Dioxide

Advantages: Photostable (do not degrade), reef-safe, non-irritating for most skin types, provide immediate protection upon application (no wait time), visible on skin (can see where applied).

Disadvantages: White cast (especially at concentrations needed for SPF50+), heavier texture, can emphasize dry patches, less elegant cosmetic feel, titanium dioxide alone provides weak UVA1 protection.

Best for: Very sensitive skin, rosacea, those concerned about chemical absorption, children, immediate water activities (no 15-minute wait).

Chemical (Organic) Filters: Avobenzone, Tinosorb, Uvinul, etc.

Advantages: No white cast, lightweight texture, easier to formulate at SPF50+ concentrations, some filters (Tinosorb M, Mexoryl SX) provide excellent UVA1 coverage, cosmetically elegant.

Disadvantages: Some filters photodegrade (require stabilizers), potential for irritation in very sensitive individuals, require 15-20 minute absorption time before sun exposure, controversy over hormone disruption for certain filters (oxybenzone, octinoxate) though evidence is mixed.

Best for: Normal to oily skin, daily wear under makeup, those who deprioritize white cast, anti-aging focused protection (need strong UVA1 coverage).

Modern Korean formulations use photostable chemical filters (Uvinul A Plus, Tinosorb M, Uvinul T 150) that address older generation concerns. Mary & May and Benton both use this advanced filter combination, eliminating photodegradation issues.

SPF + PA++++ = Complete Protection

SPF measures UVB defense (prevents sunburn, reduces cancer risk). PA measures UVA defense (prevents photoaging, pigmentation). Both are required — SPF50+ blocks 98% of UVB, PA++++ provides PPD16+ broad-spectrum UVA coverage including deep-penetrating UVA1 (340-400 nm). Under-application is universal — most apply 0.5-1.0 mg/cm² instead of required 2 mg/cm², reducing actual protection to 1/4-1/2 of labeled SPF. This makes SPF50+ essential even if "SPF30 is enough" theoretically.

Mary & May Cica Soothing Sun Cream uses four photostable chemical filters (Uvinul A Plus, Uvinul T 150, Tinosorb M, Iscotrizinol) plus 10,000 ppm Centella CICA Complex for UV-induced inflammation control. Round Lab Birch Juice Sun Cushion uses zinc oxide + titanium dioxide physical barriers plus 1,045 ppm birch sap hydration in portable reapplication format. Benton Airfit UV Defense uses same chemical filters as Mary & May with centella + panthenol + licorice soothing actives. Soosul Moisture Cream provides 5% Phellinus Linteus mushroom antioxidant foundation under sunscreen to neutralize residual ROS.

Reapply every 2 hours regardless of SPF rating. Sunscreen degradation + mechanical removal + initial under-application mean protection fails by midday without reapplication. Cushion formats facilitate makeup-compatible reapplication. Chemical filters (Mary & May, Benton) = no white cast, lightweight. Physical filters (Round Lab) = photostable, reef-safe, some white cast. Choose based on skin sensitivity and cosmetic preference — protection adequacy depends on SPF50+ PA++++ rating and consistent reapplication, not filter type.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is SPF30 really enough, or do I need SPF50+?
Theoretically SPF30 (96.7% UVB block) is sufficient if applied at 2 mg/cm² thickness. Reality: almost no one applies this much. Studies using UV cameras show average application is 0.5-1.0 mg/cm², reducing SPF30 to effective SPF7-15. At this thickness, SPF50+ becomes actual SPF12-25 — closer to minimum protection. Additionally, SPF is tested in controlled lab conditions (even application, no sweating, no touching face). Real-world factors further degrade protection. SPF50+ provides margin of safety that accounts for universal under-application. For anti-aging purposes, maximizing UVB block from 96.7% (SPF30) to 98.0% (SPF50) is meaningful — that's 33% reduction in UVB penetration (3.3% → 2.0%). Over decades of cumulative exposure, this difference is visible in photoaging rates.
Does "broad-spectrum" on Western sunscreens equal PA++++?
No. "Broad-spectrum" is FDA designation meaning sunscreen passes critical wavelength test: 90% of UV absorption must be at wavelengths ≥370 nm. This ensures some UVA2 coverage (320-340 nm) but says nothing about UVA1 protection (340-400 nm) — the range causing deepest dermal damage. PA++++ requires PPD16+ across full 320-400 nm UVA spectrum. Many Western "broad-spectrum" sunscreens achieve PPD8-12 (PA++ to PA+++ equivalent) because FDA does not mandate UVA testing. To verify UVA protection in Western products: look for PPD rating (rare on labels), check for UVA filters like avobenzone (3%) or zinc oxide (15%+), or check independent testing. Korean/Japanese sunscreens explicitly state PA rating because UVA protection is regulated requirement.
Do I need sunscreen indoors or on cloudy days?
UVA: Yes (if near windows). UVB: Generally no. UVA penetrates glass — sitting by window indoors exposes skin to 320-400 nm UVA that causes cumulative photoaging. UVB is blocked by glass and significantly reduced by clouds (but not eliminated — 30-50% UVB penetrates dense clouds). If working near windows, driving, or spending hours in daylit rooms, UVA protection is beneficial for anti-aging. If in windowless office or heavy cloud cover with minimal outdoor exposure, risk is lower. Cloudy days still deliver 30-50% of UVB and 80-90% of UVA compared to clear days, so outdoor activities in clouds warrant protection. The "SPF every day regardless" advice prioritizes anti-aging — if this is the goal, daily SPF even indoors makes sense for UVA defense.
Can I mix sunscreen with foundation or moisturizer?
Do not dilute sunscreen. Mixing sunscreen with any other product (moisturizer, primer, foundation) reduces concentration below tested levels, invalidating SPF rating. FDA tests sunscreen at 2 mg/cm² pure product. Diluting 1:1 with foundation means only 1 mg/cm² sunscreen, cutting SPF dramatically. Additionally, mixing can destabilize UV filter dispersion. Some filters clump when mixed with certain oils or silicones, creating uneven coverage with gaps. Correct application: (1) Full dose sunscreen (¼ tsp face) as separate layer, wait 15 min for chemical filters to absorb, (2) Then apply moisturizer/makeup over sunscreen. If combining is absolutely necessary (e.g., rushed morning), use products specifically formulated as "sunscreen + moisturizer" or "BB cream with SPF" — these are tested as unified formulations. Do not improvise mixing.
Why does Korean sunscreen feel so much lighter than American sunscreen?
Three reasons: (1) Advanced UV filters. Korea/Japan approve modern filters (Uvinul A Plus, Tinosorb M, Uvinul T 150, Mexoryl SX) that have higher extinction coefficients — they absorb more UV per gram, requiring lower concentrations for same SPF. These filters also have lighter molecular structure. FDA restricts to older filters (avobenzone, oxybenzone, octinoxate, zinc oxide, titanium dioxide) requiring higher concentrations and heavier formulations. (2) Cosmetic elegance prioritization. Korean sunscreens market as skincare/makeup hybrid — consumer expectation is lightweight feel and no white cast. American sunscreens market primarily on protection, with feel as secondary concern. (3) Excipient technology. Korean formulations use silicones, film-formers, and volatile carriers that evaporate post-application, leaving thin protective layer. American formulations use more traditional emollient bases that remain on skin surface. The protection level (SPF50+ PA++++) is equivalent — the difference is cosmetic feel, not efficacy.
Should I use physical or chemical sunscreen for sensitive skin?
Default recommendation: physical (zinc oxide/titanium dioxide) for very sensitive, rosacea, or reactive skin because mineral barriers are inert and non-irritating for majority. However, modern chemical filters (Tinosorb M, Uvinul A Plus) have excellent safety profiles and low irritation rates — many sensitive individuals tolerate them well. Mary & May and Benton both use these advanced chemicals plus Centella soothing, making them viable for mild-moderate sensitivity. Physical drawbacks: white cast (can emphasize redness on sensitive skin), heavy texture (can clog if sensitive to occlusive), requires careful removal (scrubbing to remove zinc/titanium can irritate). Chemical advantage: lightweight, easy removal, no cast. Trial approach: if sensitive but not severely reactive, try Mary & May or Benton first for better cosmetic experience. If rosacea, eczema, or extreme reactivity, start with Round Lab physical barrier. Patch test any new sunscreen on jawline for 3 days before full face application.
KC
About the Author
KoreanCare
KoreanCare is an online store that sells authentic Korean skincare, sourced directly from South Korea. We write about the ingredients, routines, and products we actually use and believe in — nothing more, nothing less. Every product mentioned in this article has been tested and selected for specific formulation qualities, ingredient concentrations, and proven results. No sponsorships, no affiliate links — just honest analysis based on years of experience with Korean skincare.

 

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