Sunscreen / SPF / Sunblock
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Targets: Sun protection, UV exposure / damage11 reviews
- Rs.1,095
- Rs.1,095
- Unit price
- / per
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Targets: Sun protection, UV exposure / damageNo reviews
- Rs.2,190
- Rs.2,190
- Unit price
- / per
Pakistan has one of the highest UV indexes in the world. For most of the year — from March through October across the plains, and year-round in southern cities — the UV index sits between 8 and 11, classified as very high to extreme. This is not a seasonal concern or a beach-day consideration. It is a daily skin health issue that affects everyone living in Pakistan regardless of skin tone, skin type, or whether they spend time outdoors by choice.
UV radiation causes three distinct types of damage relevant to Pakistani skin. UVB radiation burns the skin surface and directly triggers melanin overproduction — the mechanism behind tanning, dark spots, and the worsening of melasma. UVA radiation penetrates deeper, degrading collagen and elastin over time while also generating the free radicals that accelerate pigmentation at the cellular level. Both types cause cumulative, irreversible damage that compounds daily without protection.
For anyone using active ingredients — salicylic acid, kojic acid, glycolic acid, vitamin C, or retinol — SPF is not a separate concern. It is part of the active ingredient routine. Every exfoliating or brightening acid increases the skin's sensitivity to UV radiation. Using these ingredients without SPF is counterproductive: the active ingredient works to fade dark spots while unprotected UV exposure creates new ones faster than the treatment can resolve them.
Why most sunscreens fail on Pakistani skin:
The most common reason people in Pakistan skip sunscreen is texture. Heavy, occlusive formulations designed for dry climates leave an unacceptable white cast on medium and deeper South Asian skin tones, feel greasy in Pakistan's heat and humidity, and block pores on already-oily skin — creating a new problem while solving another. This is not a sunscreen preference issue. It is a formulation problem that makes compliance genuinely difficult.
A sunscreen designed for Pakistani conditions needs to be non-comedogenic — meaning it does not contribute to pore blockages — lightweight enough for daily wear in high humidity, and formulated without a significant white cast on Pakistani skin tones. These are not cosmetic preferences. They are the practical requirements for a product that needs to be applied every single morning, year-round, without hesitation.
Products in this range:
SkinFactor's SPF 50 Sunscreen PA+++ is formulated at the protection level Pakistan's UV index requires. SPF 50 blocks approximately 98% of UVB radiation. PA+++ indicates strong UVA protection — the rating system used across Asia that the PA+ scale measures more accurately for daily exposure than the UVA circle alone. The non-comedogenic formula is designed specifically for oily and acne-prone skin, absorbing without the greasy residue that causes most Pakistani users to stop wearing sunscreen.
The SPF 50 PA+++ Combo pairs the sunscreen with a supporting product for a complete morning protection routine — the practical pairing for anyone already using an active ingredient routine who wants to consolidate their morning steps.
SPF belongs in every routine on this site — acne, pigmentation, brightening, or barrier repair. It is the step that determines whether every other product delivers its full potential or fights an uphill battle against daily UV damage. For how SPF fits into a complete skincare routine for Pakistani skin, see the Acne Control and Pigmentation ranges where it is a mandatory final step in every routine recommendation.

