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Why can't SPF 15 simply mean '15 hours before you burn'?

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Answer: It measures UV dose

It counts clock timeThat is exactly the clock-time misconception. SPF is measured by comparing UV exposure needed to cause redness with sunscreen against UV exposure needed without it. A label number can guide protection level, but it does not promise a fixed number of hours outside. The stopwatch idea fails because the test unit is UV dose.

It measures UV doseRight: SPF is about UV dose to redness, not a promise of hours. A lab test compares how much UV exposure causes sunburn on protected skin versus unprotected skin, then labels the ratio. That is why SPF 15 means a fifteen-fold dose ratio under test conditions, not a universal fifteen-hour window. The surprising part is that the number is mathematical, not scheduling advice.

It tracks skin heatHeat is a sensory cue, not the SPF measurement. The label is built around ultraviolet exposure and the redness response, not how warm the skin feels. That distinction matters because comfort can make people under-read UV risk. A cool-feeling day does not turn the SPF number into a heat index.

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