The sunscreen scandal in Australia continues to escalate. Authorities have now pulled 18 products from the shelves over safety concerns.
Popular brands under scrutiny
A consumer advocacy group revealed in June that several expensive sunscreens failed to provide the promised protection. Ultra Violette’s Lean Screen Skinscreen claimed SPF 50+ but tested at SPF 4. The company voluntarily recalled it in August.
The medicines regulator has since flagged 20 more sunscreens from different brands. These products share the same base formula, and investigators found alarming inconsistencies in their performance.
Regulators warn of low protection
Preliminary results suggest the formula rarely exceeds SPF 21. Some products might deliver protection as low as SPF 4. Out of 21 named sunscreens, eight were recalled or halted. Sales of 10 others remain paused, while two more face review. One listed product is made in Australia but not sold domestically.
High cancer risk fuels anger
Australia records the highest rate of skin cancer worldwide. Two in three citizens will face at least one removal of cancerous skin tissue in their lifetime. Because of this, the country enforces strict sunscreen standards. The scandal has triggered public outrage and raised doubts internationally. Experts warn that both the manufacturing process and the reliability of SPF testing are now under suspicion.
Manufacturer halts base formula
Wild Child Laboratories Pty Ltd, the producer of the contested base formula, has stopped making it. Its chief executive Tom Curnow stressed that regulators found no issues with production at its facility. He said the discrepancies highlight a broader industry problem.
Concerns over testing integrity
The regulator has long questioned whether SPF testing methods are too subjective. In its latest update, it expressed serious doubts about the work of Princeton Consumer Research Corp, a US-based laboratory. Many sunscreen makers used this lab to verify SPF ratings.
Mr Curnow confirmed Wild Child cut ties with the US laboratory. He said the company now relies on independent, accredited testers. Regulators contacted every firm using the disputed formula or linked to the US lab. They also wrote directly to Princeton Consumer Research Corp but reported no reply so far.

