Skip to content

Bag

Your bag is empty

Continue shopping

Enjoy up to 15% off 4 full sizes of your choice with our set curator

Get Started

Select Gifts

The Best SPF Lip Balm
Caring for SkinSep 8, 2024

The Best SPF Lip Balm

Sunscreen is important: Every day, every wear. That includes on your lips, too. This short guide will help you select the best lip balm with SPF, which moisturizes lips while protecting them from UV light.

If there’s one true beauty essential that exists in the world, it’s sunscreen. You probably already know this, but it bears repeating: Sun protection is an important part of your skincare routine and should be applied every day. If you’ve ever been a kid on a beach, you can understand why.

What’s more difficult to understand is how to apply sunscreen, so that it can protect skin with its intended (and rigorously-tested) efficacy. Unlike your moisturizer, a single application won’t get you very far—reapplication is key. And you may remember to wear it on exposed areas outside of the face, like the hands, neck, even the tops of the ears. SPF should be applied anywhere the sun hits, and that includes lips.

In fact, the skin on the lips is some of our most delicate skin, regardless of your skin type. No wonder it requires our protection. But once again, unlike choosing a moisturizer (which comes in many different textures and formulas) or the right sunscreen for your skin type, it’s an easy task to find adequate lip sunscreen: All you need to do is locate the best lip balm with SPF.

What sun does to skin

The sun is a powerful, sustaining life force; We wouldn’t be here without it. That power can even be felt from some 92 million miles away, if you spend a little too long outside on a bright and clear day.

The sun is an effective heater and illuminator thanks in part to ultraviolet radiation, or UV rays, which arrive to Earth in three types. UVC, the most harmful to us, is absorbed entirely by our planet’s atmosphere. Most UVB is absorbed, too, but most UVA rays reach the Earth’s surface. These UVA and UVB rays are what we’re protecting ourselves from when we apply sunblock.

What happens if we don’t? The process of photoaging, or aging as a result of sun overexposure, can occur. UV light travels from the sun directly to our skin, where it can reach the dermis and cause DNA changes at the cellular level, according to Yale Medicine. Photodamage begins as early as in our teens, though its telltale signs—sun spots from hyperpigmentation, wrinkles from structure loss—may not reveal themselves until later on. This is why sunscreen is more than just a way to skip a sunburn—it’s also one of the most effective anti-aging products in existence.

But aging, in any form, is a privilege. A more grave argument for sunscreen centers on the proven link between UV radiation from sun overexposure and skin cancer. One of the most common cancers, having five or more sunburns doubles one’s risk for developing melanoma, according to the Skin Cancer Foundation. In light of this, the idea of sun protection takes on a new urgency.

Do lips need SPF?

The skin on our lips is unlike anywhere else on the body. For one, it’s hard to imagine another patch of skin that sees more action than the one just beneath our noses. We use our mouths to breathe and communicate. We use them for expression, for sustenance, and so much more. Is it any wonder we sometimes paint them, too?

The lip vermillion, otherwise known as where you apply lipstick, borders your facial skin and the inner mucous membrane. But unlike the skin on your face, it is much thinner, and lacks glands that produce sebum—skin’s own self-moisturizing fluid. This is why lips are so prone to getting chapped, why lip balms are so beneficial, and why lip balm is its own category of product. They need all of the moisturization help they can get, which is why there are specific lip care routines for winter. They also need sunscreen.

It’s possible that your face sunscreen would make a fine SPF if applied to lips. But it also might taste unpleasant, and could certainly dry your lips out, which might keep you from using it and cause sunburned lips. Some of the formulas that make sunscreen nicer to wear on your face aren’t made to wear on your lips. An SPF lip balm, by contrast, is designed for lips’ unique skin. The best lip balms offer ample moisturization alongside sun protection. Bonus points if it adds a little tint, too.

The best SPF lip balm

Lip SPF, like anywhere-else SPF, needs to be frequently reapplied—every two hours, according to the Skin Cancer Foundation, even when you’re indoors. The best sunscreen for you is not only one that can be easily reapplied, but one that you enjoy using, which can help solidify the habit. SPF for the face can be tricky to reapply, especially over makeup. SPF for lips is easier; we already reapply it, even when SPF isn’t included.

Then there are the best tinted lip balms with SPF, which make sun protection for lips as simple as applying lipstick. These hybrid makeup-skincare products are formulated with ingredients that moisturize skin, with an added wash of wearable color. Add UV filters, and this single product condenses three different skincare steps into one slim tube.

The Kissu Lip Tint SPF 25, from Tatcha, is one such multitasker. It’s foremost a skincare product, made with emollient plant-derived lanolin and silk protein for a weightless moisturizing skin finish. The shades assemble an edited wardrobe of lip tint colors, from coral pink to deep berry, and can be built up for higher intensity color. But most importantly, The Kissu Lip Tint is made with SPF 25 sun protection to help prevent photoaging while keeping lips hydrated. (In a trial, 100% of respondents reported feeling moisturized instantly and an hour after application.*)

We at Tatcha take inspiration from Japanese beauty culture, which places an emphasis on SPF. Japanese women have long understood that sun protection is essential to maintaining healthy-looking lips. This creamy, hydrating lip tint makes it easy, too.

††Based on bio-instrumentation (TEWL) clinical study of 42 panelists.

Recent Posts

View all
Is Matcha Good for Acne?
Caring for SkinJun 11, 2026
Is Matcha Good for Acne?

Matcha is a special type of finely powdered green tea prized for its bright green hue, distinct cultivation practices, ceremonial preparation, and transformative health benefits. The tea is linked with many health benefits, from improving mental alertness, fighting free radicals thanks to the potent antioxidants, and boosting numerous cognitive functions.  Additionally, matcha is also proven to be wonderfully beneficial for reducing blemishes when applied topically, an impressive fact proven by numerous clinical studies.

The Best Foaming Facial Cleanser
Caring for SkinJun 11, 2026
The Best Foaming Facial Cleanser

Foaming cleansers can be effective for all, but the secret to using them correctly is discovering a formula that is ideal for your skin type. A creamy foaming cleanser, which imparts a soft hydration onto the skin as cleansing, is more ideal for dry skin, while a refreshing foaming cleanser that includes oil-balancing ingredients is more ideal for combination and oily skin tones. Some formulas work by allowing the dense bubbles to grasp onto debris, sebum, and makeup, washing away in a single step. While other formulas might need an oil cleanser first to break down these trickier long-lasting ingredients. 

The Best Blemish Begone Skincare Products
Caring for SkinJun 10, 2026
The Best Blemish Begone Skincare Products

Blemishes can be caused by a variety of things, and are a fact of life. But choosing the right skincare products can help you keep breakouts at arm’s length. Blemishes happen to all of us. But to some of us, they happen more often than not. We call ourselves blemish-prone. And in addition to our usual skincare routines for morning and night, we make active choices about the products we use to make sure blemishes stay away. The word blemish, from the French blessmiss—to make angry—might be the most polite way to refer to many types of skin blemishes like acne, pimples, zits, and all of the other names we ascribe to those skin reactions that cause small unusual bumps. A bit ironique, considering that the word we now associate with acne connotes an imperfection or something else wrong. And while acne can be caused by imbalances in the skin, it’s common enough for all of us not to make it such a big deal. These are not mountains. They’re even much smaller than molehills. Still, those who deal with blemish- or acne-prone skin know that not all skincare products are created for the same skin type. All of us need to choose the right cleanser and moisturizer for our skin, but how we do so is up to us—and, usually, to the specifics of our skin’s behavior. A dermatologist should be your first stop on your skincare journey, but the following guide can help shed a little light on the acne-prone skin type, and some of the common skincare choices (and the optimal acne skincare routine!) made by those who have it. What is blemish-prone skin? Blemish-prone skin is another term for oily skin, which is one of the major skin types. Oily skin is usually categorized by skin that produces more sebum than so-called “normal” skin, but there are a few ways to glean more information about how your skin behaves at baseline. “Oil” is a poetic name for sebum, the waxy substance made of lipids like cholesterol, squalane, and glycerides that is secreted from sebaceous glands that sit within pores and hair follicles. Sebaceous glands are an important mechanism that our skin uses to moisturize and protect itself. Many of our sebaceous glands can be found on our faces and scalps, though there are a few places we don’t have sebaceous glands—like on our lips, or the bottoms of our feet. Sebum is a protective substance that helps to seal moisture by shoring up our skin barrier. In other words, it’s a good thing to have. But those with oily skin can have too much of it, and too much can lead to a higher incidence of breakouts. While oily skin can be a genetic trait, it can also be influenced by the environment around us—the climate, for instance—and our own behaviors—like how we take care of our skin. How do blemishes occur? You’re unlikely to find the term “blemish” in dermatology coursework. Generally, when we’re talking about a blemish, we’re talking about a form of acne, which is described most concisely as a blocked hair follicle. The pores that dot our skin are small channels that house sebaceous glands and hair follicles; they help traffic sebum up and out of skin. When sebum and dead skin clogs a pore, it may become what is called “common acne”, though there are a few types. Blackheads and whiteheads are caused by sebum buildup, and are distinguished by whether or not they’re open (and black) or closed (and white). When an infectious bacteria is introduced, it can cause a more robust infection, resulting in other forms of acne like papules and pustules that are painful to the touch. If you need help identifying what kind of blemish has popped up on you, head to your nearest dermatologist’s office to find out. What are the most important blemish skincare steps? Perhaps the most important thing to do in the face of acne is: Not panic! Breakouts happen to all of us, and usually fix themselves on their own. But if you identify with the oily skin type, and find yourself devoting more time to quelling breakouts than you’d like, you might want to consider some of the skincare products for oily skin, which are popular among those with acne-prone skin. A few common switches include: Cleansing with a gel. Dermatologists at the University of Florida Health once proclaimed that “the most important thing you can do for oily skin is to keep your skin clean.” Those with oily skin may want a cleansing formula with more reach than surface-level face washes—something that can cleanse pores deeply, ensuring they remain clear of acne-causing buildup. Gel cleansers are usually the ones for the job. Water-based gel cleansers are slippery, clear, and tend to foam up. Tatcha’s brand new Matcha Cleanse is a soapless gel that deeply decongests pores— thanks to a unique gel-to-foam texture—to reduce oil, and visibly calm skin without stripping. The Matcha Foam Cleanser takes on oiliness with a gentle touch: balancing the microbiome, soothing, and calming. Exfoliating with acids. There’s a reason that the inventors of alpha hydroxy acids have been honored all over the world. Their contribution to skincare includes one of the most popular exfoliating acids of all time—and it’s a boon for those with oily skin. AHAs, as they’re known, help to “peel” the skin by breaking down the bonds between old and new skin cells. Exfoliation is essential for all skin types, but the ease of AHAs and their efficacy in removing dead skin makes them great for oily skin. They’re commonly recommended to those with oily and acne-prone skin, especially in the form of a daily treatment. A product like the Texture Tonic, which takes the form of a lightweight daily toner, allows you to fit gentle exfoliation into your regular skincare routine—right between cleansing and moisturizing. Its AHAs come from a cornucopia of fruit sources proven to resurface uneven and dull skin—leaving it smooth and radiant. Moisturizing with water Sure, the idea of moisturizing with nothing but water may sound counterintuitive, or downright impossible. And yet it's the animating idea behind the Water Cream, Tatcha’s best-selling moisturizer for oily skin. This lightweight, oil-free cream has a bursting effect when applied, flooding the skin with vital and necessary hydration. It’s also beloved for its powerful superplant ingredients that address traits commonly found in oily skin, like antioxidant-rich wild rose (which has the benefit of smoothing the appearance of large pores) and anti-inflammatory heartleaf extract (a natural azelaic acid alternative). Masking with clay When it comes to natural ingredients that help oily skin, you can’t beat clay. Clay helps absorb excess oil, and is said to also draw impurities out of the skin. Anyone who has used a clay mask can attest to its drying powers, which is why it’s not usually a daily ingredient. Instead, it's suited for more irregular use, like in a face mask. The Clarifying Clay Mask, formulated as a treatment for oily skin, uses marine mineral-rich kucha clay sourced from the islands of Okinawa. For centuries prior, Okinawan women have cherished kucha clay for its superb oil-absorbing properties, using it as a hair powder or face mask. When mixed with volcanic ash and exfoliating Japanese konjac, it makes for smoother, clearer skin in no more than three minutes. 180 seconds per week may not alone calm oily or blemish-prone skin, but good holistic skincare habits will.

View all

Subscribe to our newsletter

By signing up, you agree with our privacy policy.