A chemical SPF with pearlescent pigments giving a dewy finish. Functions as sunscreen + tinted primer in one. Great on dry/normal skin; combination or oily skin can go shiny. The niacinamide and HA are genuine, not just window-dressing.
What this is good for
✓ Great forprotectDullness
• Use with caution ifSensitive skinAcne-prone skin
Ingredient stack
Each ingredient is listed in descending concentration. Above the 1% line the order is regulated — below it, brands can list in any order.
Ingredients above the dashed gold line are dosed above 1% (the regulatory threshold) — these are what the formulation is really built on.
position-estimated %1% regulatory line
What's actually doing the work
SPF / Sunscreen
Zinc Oxide / Titanium Dioxide / Broad-Spectrum UV Filter
Mineral
The single most evidence-backed anti-aging intervention. UV drives 80–90% of visible skin aging, hyperpigmentation and skin cancer risk. SPF 30 blocks ~97% UVB; SPF 50 blocks ~98%. Mineral filters (zinc oxide, titanium dioxide) physically deflect UV; chemical filters absorb and convert UV to heat.
Niacinamide
Vitamin B3 / Nicotinamide
Vitamin
The most versatile and universally tolerated skincare active. Inhibits melanin transfer (fading dark spots), reduces sebum by up to 68%, strengthens the skin barrier via ceramide synthesis, calms inflammatory pathways to reduce redness, and visibly minimises pores over 4–8 weeks. Works at any pH and pairs with virtually every other active.
Hyaluronic Acid
Sodium Hyaluronate / HA / Multi-Weight HA
Acid
A glycosaminoglycan naturally present throughout the body, holding up to 1000x its weight in water. The most powerful naturally occurring humectant. Multi-weight HA (high, medium and low molecular weight) delivers hydration at different skin depths. Production declines significantly with age.
Routine placement
Morning only
Similar on the shelf
Put this in context
Skin Stacker is independent and receives no payment from any brand. Ingredient analysis is based on publicly disclosed INCI lists and the peer-reviewed literature. Formulations change — always re-check the label on your specific batch before using.