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Ingredient · INCI reference

Ethylhexyl Triazone

a.k.a. Uvinul T 150

CAS 88122-99-0

Ethylhexyl Triazone (Uvinul T 150) is a newer-generation organic UVB filter that is photostable on its own. It is approved up to 5% in the EU, Japan, and Korea, but remains pending US approval. Safety data is favorable, with a low EWG score and no flagged endocrine or reef concerns.

Modern organic Next-gen photostable chemical filters. Gen · new organic
01 Spectrum coverage UVB
UVB 290–320nm UVB (290–320nm) — covered UVA-II 320–340nm UVA-II (320–340nm) — not covered UVA-I 340–400nm UVA-I (340–400nm) — not covered
02 Regional approval · max %
JP 5% Japan: Approved · max 5% KR 5% South Korea: Approved · max 5% EU 5% Europe: Approved · max 5% US · United States: Pending
03 Safety profile
EWG score
1
Reef-toxic
No
Endocrine disruptor
No
Comedogenicity
0
Reference

Frequently asked questions

What does Ethylhexyl Triazone protect against?

It absorbs UVB only, so it is paired with UVA filters to deliver broad-spectrum coverage. On its own it is photostable, which helps the overall sunscreen system stay effective over a day of wear.

Is it allowed in US sunscreens?

Not yet. As of this data, its US status is pending, so you will mostly see it in sunscreens formulated for the EU, Japan, and Korea, where it is approved up to 5%.

Is Ethylhexyl Triazone considered safe?

Available data shows an EWG score of 1, no endocrine disruption flag, and no reef toxicity flag, putting it among the better-profile organic UV filters in current use.

Why is it called a new-generation filter?

It belongs to a group of larger, more stable molecules developed after older cinnamates and salicylates, offering strong UVB absorbance with good photostability and a low irritation profile in available data.

Products in catalogue

Containing Ethylhexyl Triazone