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Ingredient · INCI reference

Benzophenone-3

a.k.a. Oxybenzone

CAS 131-57-7

Oxybenzone (Benzophenone-3) is an older organic UVA2 and UVB filter that is photostable. It is approved up to 6% in the EU and US and 5% in Japan and Korea, with the EU classifying it as restricted. Available safety data flags it as an endocrine disruptor and reef-toxic, with an EWG score of 8.

Legacy organic Pre-2000 chemical filters; broadly approved. Gen · old organic
01 Spectrum coverage UVA2 · UVB
UVB 290–320nm UVB (290–320nm) — covered UVA-II 320–340nm UVA-II (320–340nm) — 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 ! 6% Europe: Restricted · max 6% US 6% United States: Approved · max 6%
03 Safety profile
EWG score
8
Reef-toxic
Yes
Endocrine disruptor
Yes
Comedogenicity
0
Reference

Frequently asked questions

Why is Oxybenzone controversial?

Available data flags it as an endocrine disruptor and reef-toxic, with an EWG score of 8. These concerns drove EU restriction and the shift away from oxybenzone in many newer formulas.

Is Oxybenzone reef-safe?

No. It is flagged as reef-toxic in this data and is commonly singled out in reef-protection discussions. Mineral or non-flagged organic filters are typical alternatives where reef impact matters.

What UV does it cover?

It absorbs in UVA2 and UVB, so it offers partial broad-spectrum coverage but does not reach UVA1. Modern formulas often use Tinosorb M or zinc oxide for fuller UVA coverage instead.

Is it still legal?

Yes. In this data it is approved up to 6% in the EU and US and up to 5% in Japan and Korea, though the EU lists it as restricted, reflecting the safety concerns noted above.

Products in catalogue

Containing Benzophenone-3