Soltan Family Pack Suncare Lotions SPF15 200ml and SPF30 200ml, Kids Suncare Lotion SPF50+ 200ml & Aftersun 200ml.
Top comments
hoske21a
13 Jul 173#3
Normally £14!
beergut1969 to itsgun4u
13 Jul 173#2
Sorry I didn't know that. My wife told me that was a good price and she is never wrong!
All comments (44)
itsgun4u
13 Jul 171#1
Thanks. That's standard price.
beergut1969 to itsgun4u
13 Jul 173#2
Sorry I didn't know that. My wife told me that was a good price and she is never wrong!
mrs8urns to itsgun4u
13 Jul 171#4
Not standard price - Hot! will pick up tomorrow ready for my jollies :sunglasses:
shalton to itsgun4u
13 Jul 171#6
Not. It's normally £14.
hoske21a
13 Jul 173#3
Normally £14!
shalton
13 Jul 171#5
Sounds pretty good to me.
vjawakefield
13 Jul 171#7
Fab- thanks- brought these last year and was waiting to see if the price dropped again this year- just ordered two- 5*UVA and not many sun creams can claim that
awrightuk to vjawakefield
14 Jul 17#26
That's because Boots invented the rating system... they would struggle not to be 5* :smile:
mistermoneysaver
13 Jul 171#8
I used this stuff for years. Don't anymore though due to the very bad press. Here
SpyJoe
14 Jul 171#9
That was over 2 years ago. Pretty sure they have changed their products by now.
goldy12
14 Jul 17#10
Not for me as I'm a brand snob where sun protection is concerned ( Nivea or Ambre Solaire). Good price for those who are not thou so heat added
I used to be but when buying for my little boy noticed that both Nivea and Ambre Solaire are only three star even on their factor 50!
10cass10 to goldy12
14 Jul 17#17
most nivea are only 4 star UVA so not that great for the price you pay
zapod28
14 Jul 17#12
We've used Nivea for years as a family, switched to Soltan for a trip to Spain last week. Super stuff - goes on without the residual greasiness of Nivea and did it's job protecting us. My wife's super picky when it comes to sun cream and she's a convert.
X-Cell
14 Jul 17#13
Wife won't touch anything but Soltan screen. SPF50 in Egypt for 3 weeks never had an issue. Pity to see there doesn't seem to be any offers on it this year though. It's normally at least buy 1 get one half price. Going to be a costly one this year.
Matrard
14 Jul 17#15
Looks good. Do these suncream fit for kids ?
10cass10
14 Jul 17#16
most big brand names which are like £8+ only seem to be 3 or 4 star UVA as where quite a lot of own brands are 5 star and a lot cheaper it's not all about the name and the factor you need to be looking at the UVA star rating especially if your buying it for children.
georgia2006
14 Jul 17#18
Good price but isn't the 'Once' suncream less hassle to have to keep putting on? Obv reapply if going in water etc but at least not every 2hrs........
jomay to georgia2006
18 Jul 17#40
It depends what you prefer. I used a Soltan Once a few years back, and it was very heavy with an almost grease-like consistency.
I did activities and was sweating a lot. It wasn't a nice feeling having that stuff on my face. I prefer to reapply a lighter sunscreen every few hours.
Meathotukdeals
14 Jul 17#19
That's pretty worrying. Mum had skin cancer. It was removed but she was told never to go in to full sun without protection. I got the boots stuff due to SPF, 5 star UV, and lasting several hours. Anyone know if it was one soltan product that failed or all those tested?
luvsadealdealdeal to Meathotukdeals
14 Jul 171#22
if the report is true then the 30SPF was reduced to 20SPF
20SPF re-applied several times every couple of hours (as recommended on the bottle) would still give excellent protection in most situations
perhaps not on Mars
josephallen
14 Jul 17#20
I stopped using it a few years back as I found it just didn't work as well as Nivea. Was getting burned through it / wasn't lasting. Seems a false economy to me, and you can get offers on the branded stuff if you keep a look out.
Faba1993
14 Jul 17#21
:laughing:
heated!
daz1969
14 Jul 172#23
The only 13 that passed the Which? SPF test 2017
Aldi Lacura Suncare Spray SPF30 (200ml), £2.79
Boots Soltan Protect & Moisturise Spray SPF30 (200ml), £5
Calypso SPF30 Press & Protect Lotion (200ml), £2.99
Garnier Ambre Solaire Dry Mist Spray SPF30 (200ml), £8
Hawaiian Tropic Satin Protection SPF30 Lotion (180ml), £6.50
Hawaiian Tropic Silk Hydration Protective Sun Lotion SPF30 (180ml), £8
Marks & Spencer Sun Smart Moisture Protect Sun Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £8.50
Malibu Protective Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £3.99
Morrisons Sun Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £3
Nivea Sun Protect & Moisture Sun Spray SPF30 (300ml), £6
Piz Buin Allergy Sensitive Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £7
Superdrug Solait Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £4.49
Tesco Soleil Light Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £3.50
Firefly1
14 Jul 17#24
I have sat in many dermatology clinics.
SPF 30 is the minimum you should be using (Or - if you don't care about yourself, the minimum you should be using on your children).
I would recommend SPF 50 though, especially in the 'heatwave' days or mainland Europe.
It's also worth remembering 3* UVA at SPF 50 has more UVA protection than a 5* UVA at SPF 20.
To be honest, any SPF below 30 should be banned from the high street as it is falsely reassuring.
luvsadealdealdeal to Firefly1
14 Jul 17#27
that's just silly
SPF 20 gives fantastic protection
it all depends on the situation
perhaps somebody is just going to have a few drinks in the full European sun for (say) 3 hrs
SPF 20 applied once then again 2 hrs later will give perfect protection
Meathotukdeals
14 Jul 17#25
Oh well my post never showed let's try again...?
Meathotukdeals
14 Jul 17#28
Well the above link is to a 2015 article. I found a more recent one here that found an Avon product to fail. Further of a worry is this from the same article "In 2016, Which? tested four ‘once a day’ sunscreens to see whether they’d really keep you protected all day long. We found that none of them were up to the job – the average drop in SPF after 6-8 hours was 74% – that’s the equivalent of an SPF30 product dropping down to just SPF8. If you use a ‘once a day’ sun cream, you should reapply it regularly, as with any other sunscreen." The Soltan I'd been buying was also a supposedly (!) long lasting cream. Phfff. I can only hope things will be OK. Mum avoids the sun when she can and apart from making sure she has her blummin Soltan cream on, I try to get her to wear a hat too. Still not good reading knowing how inportant this can be and the false claims the manufacturers are making.
luvsadealdealdeal
14 Jul 17#29
you'd have to be a bit thick to think an 'apply once per day' suntan protection cream would work well if only applied once
of course: all SPF creams need to be re-applied regularly, whatever the claims on the tube
Firefly1
14 Jul 17#30
I'm trying to hunt down research articles with evidence, but this is from - arguably - a world-renowned dermatologist:
(Summary: "The importance of using both UVB and UVA protection cannot be emphasized enough. For patients who really wish to know “how high should I go?” I suggest products with SPFs no lower than 30 and no higher than 50")
luvsadealdealdeal
14 Jul 17#31
it all depends how long you are going to expose your skin to the sun, and the strength of the sun
both factors you seem to ignore
Firefly1
14 Jul 17#32
But you also ignore the fact that most people only own one bottle of suncream. Most of the country don't have a cupboard full of SPF 15, SPF 30 and SPF 50 - and able to decide (correctly) which is suitable. Most people will own one bottle and use one strength. You should not stock your cupboard with SPF 15/20. Of course you might have a range of suncreams and be able to choose correctly, most people won't.
SPF 50 won't do any harm. SPF 15 will in the wrong situation. Just buy SPF 50.
luvsadealdealdeal
14 Jul 17#33
we've got about 50 different bottles of suncream :smiley:
Northerndave
14 Jul 17#34
Any proof of that, or did you just make that up like 95% of stats? I'd rather bet the average household has multiple bottles of the stuff.
If I'm popping out for 30 mins and I want not to burn, a Factor 10 would only be the equivalent of 3 mins without any protection. An hour in the midday sun with a Factor 15 is only the equivalent of 4 mins without. It's all about coverage and timing.
A minimum of Factor 30 is overkill and more importantly not needed.
chrismc20050
14 Jul 17#35
Boots dont sell fresh suncream, It has 12 month shelf life if you look at back of packaging, they pack it up send it back to Warehouse for storage, then gets sent back for following summer. god knows what age the bottles are
u664541
15 Jul 17#36
12 months from day of opening.
Tweenie2017
18 Jul 17#37
Try Ultrasun on QVC. More expensive, but, much better & you only apply ONCE a day, doesn't matter how many times you're in & out of the water. Plus, most other sunscreens are off by the following ur NOT, with Ultrasun. Honestly, it really is worth every penny. You spend all that good money on a fab holiday, but, then, scrimp on your Sun Protection. You won't regret it. The only regret you will have is WHY DIDN'T I TRY THIS YEARS AGO. Enjoy your hols!! X
Tweenie2017
18 Jul 17#38
Check out ULTRASUN. They have all the evidence & information you could wish for. The MD IS ABI CLEEVE. She's lovely & you can also find her on QVC!! Ultrasun Spf Sun Creams all the way. They do soooooo many different ones too. X
lily2009
18 Jul 17#39
Nivea kids suncream made my daughter come out in a really bad rash, it's something in it that makes it waterproof that has a bad reaction with some children, Aldi suncream for kids was fine and a 1/3 of the price of nivea.
jomay to lily2009
18 Jul 17#41
This should give the brand-fools to think.
I've got a contact allergy against certain preservatives, worst is (methyl-)isothiazolinone and parabene's aren't great as well. The first is a well known, extremely potent allergen. Still, most branded, expensive skin care products use them. If at all, brands have an absurdly expensive top end range that doesn't use these preservatives.
Funnily enough, the cheapest Boots/aldi/lidl range are often a viable option for me. My allergy forces me to buy cheap! :smile:
jyonda
19 Jul 17#42
Superdrug have a good offer on for their 5* spf30 200ml- 2 bottles delivered with a free cooling spray for £3.53.
mitford
20 Jul 17#43
Anyone know how long this offer is on for?
Meathotukdeals
22 Jul 17#44
Yeah of course I should ignore the instructions on something that is impossible to judge myself without using specialist lab equipment.
Opening post
Top comments
All comments (44)
I did activities and was sweating a lot. It wasn't a nice feeling having that stuff on my face. I prefer to reapply a lighter sunscreen every few hours.
20SPF re-applied several times every couple of hours (as recommended on the bottle) would still give excellent protection in most situations
perhaps not on Mars
heated!
Aldi Lacura Suncare Spray SPF30 (200ml), £2.79
Boots Soltan Protect & Moisturise Spray SPF30 (200ml), £5
Calypso SPF30 Press & Protect Lotion (200ml), £2.99
Garnier Ambre Solaire Dry Mist Spray SPF30 (200ml), £8
Hawaiian Tropic Satin Protection SPF30 Lotion (180ml), £6.50
Hawaiian Tropic Silk Hydration Protective Sun Lotion SPF30 (180ml), £8
Marks & Spencer Sun Smart Moisture Protect Sun Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £8.50
Malibu Protective Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £3.99
Morrisons Sun Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £3
Nivea Sun Protect & Moisture Sun Spray SPF30 (300ml), £6
Piz Buin Allergy Sensitive Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £7
Superdrug Solait Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £4.49
Tesco Soleil Light Lotion SPF30 (200ml), £3.50
SPF 30 is the minimum you should be using (Or - if you don't care about yourself, the minimum you should be using on your children).
I would recommend SPF 50 though, especially in the 'heatwave' days or mainland Europe.
It's also worth remembering 3* UVA at SPF 50 has more UVA protection than a 5* UVA at SPF 20.
To be honest, any SPF below 30 should be banned from the high street as it is falsely reassuring.
SPF 20 gives fantastic protection
it all depends on the situation
perhaps somebody is just going to have a few drinks in the full European sun for (say) 3 hrs
SPF 20 applied once then again 2 hrs later will give perfect protection
of course: all SPF creams need to be re-applied regularly, whatever the claims on the tube
http://www.skincancer.org/skin-cancer-information/ask-the-experts/does-a-higher-spf-sunscreen-always-protect-your-skin-better
(Summary: "The importance of using both UVB and UVA protection cannot be emphasized enough. For patients who really wish to know “how high should I go?” I suggest products with SPFs no lower than 30 and no higher than 50")
both factors you seem to ignore
SPF 50 won't do any harm. SPF 15 will in the wrong situation. Just buy SPF 50.
If I'm popping out for 30 mins and I want not to burn, a Factor 10 would only be the equivalent of 3 mins without any protection. An hour in the midday sun with a Factor 15 is only the equivalent of 4 mins without. It's all about coverage and timing.
A minimum of Factor 30 is overkill and more importantly not needed.
I've got a contact allergy against certain preservatives, worst is (methyl-)isothiazolinone and parabene's aren't great as well. The first is a well known, extremely potent allergen. Still, most branded, expensive skin care products use them. If at all, brands have an absurdly expensive top end range that doesn't use these preservatives.
Funnily enough, the cheapest Boots/aldi/lidl range are often a viable option for me. My allergy forces me to buy cheap! :smile: