Aqualogica · 🇮🇳 India

Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g

5 ingredients
What's in it

Below is every ingredient in Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g explained, its standout actives, and the side effects reported in research for those actives — analysed for Indian skin.

Suitability at a glance — for Indian skin

🍄 Fungal-acne safe
No known Malassezia triggers detected
Fragrance-free
No fragrance or EU-declared allergens

Flags derived from the ingredient list using dermatology reference data (fungal-acne substrate, comedogenicity, EU allergens). General guidance, not a diagnosis.

Your questions, answered from the ingredient list

Is Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g fungal-acne safe?
Based on its listed ingredients, no known Malassezia (fungal-acne) triggers were detected in Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g.
Does Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g contain fragrance?
No fragrance ingredients or EU-declared allergens were detected in the listed ingredients of Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g.
Is Radiance+ Water Light Fluid Sunscreen - 50g safe to use in pregnancy?
None of its listed ingredients are flagged for pregnancy caution in our reference data — but always confirm your full routine with your own doctor.

Answers are derived from the printed ingredient list and dermatology reference data — general guidance, not a diagnosis or a therapeutic claim.

Key actives

blue light
Photobiomodulation / acne-targeting light therapy

Blue light (typically 405-470 nm) is a wavelength-based active used in dermatology primarily to target Cutibacterium acnes via porphyrin excitation and to manage mild-to-moderate acne. It is delivered through LED devices rather than being a topical formulation ingredient.

Side effects reported in research

Aggregated from the active ingredients in this product.

Reported effectHow oftenNotes
No direct side effects (descriptor, not a substance)Very rareAs a texture descriptor it has no intrinsic biological activity; any reactions stem from the specific ingredients used to achieve the feel.
Irritation or breakout from underlying emollients/siliconesRareDepends on the actual agents (e.g., certain esters) used to create the lightweight feel, not the texture itself.
Transient erythema (redness)CommonMild and usually resolves within hours after exposure.
Dryness or skin tightnessCommonReported with repeated sessions; generally minor.
Temporary hyperpigmentationUncommonMore likely in darker skin phototypes.
Headache or eye strainUncommonAssociated with inadequate eye protection during exposure.
Stinging or burning sensationRareUsually mild and short-lived.
Free-radical-mediated oxidative stressRareSuggested by some studies with high-dose or prolonged exposure.
Blistering or burnsVery rareLinked to misuse or excessive intensity/duration.

Frequencies reflect typical cosmetic use reported in the literature, not a guarantee for your skin.

Full ingredient breakdown

IngredientWhat it does
lightweight texture
sensory/formulation descriptor
"Lightweight texture" is not an ingredient but a sensory and formulation descriptor referring to products that feel thin, non-greasy, and absorb quickly, typically achieved using volatile silicones, light esters, or low-oil/water-based bases. It describes the rheology and skin-feel of a formulation rather than any active compound.
blue light Key active
Photobiomodulation / acne-targeting light therapy
Blue light (typically 405-470 nm) is a wavelength-based active used in dermatology primarily to target Cutibacterium acnes via porphyrin excitation and to manage mild-to-moderate acne. It is delivered through LED devices rather than being a topical formulation ingredient.
response
N/A — not an ingredient
"Response" is not a recognized skincare or cosmetic-chemistry ingredient; it appears to be a placeholder or system term rather than a defined topical compound. No INCI listing or dermatological data exists for it as an ingredient.
this.response
placeholder/non-ingredient
"this.response" is not a recognized skincare ingredient; it appears to be a programming or templating reference rather than a cosmetic compound. No dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry data exists for it.
onReadyStateChange
N/A — not a skincare ingredient
"onReadyStateChange" is not a dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry ingredient; it is a JavaScript event handler property (notably on the XMLHttpRequest object) that fires when the readyState of an asynchronous request changes. It has no role in skincare formulation.

Key active = does the main work. Ingredient explanations are drawn from public databases & literature.

From published literature

Peer-reviewed papers on the active ingredients in this product, via PubMed.

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