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COSRX Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick SPF 50 in a compact twist-up tube

Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick

Portable SPF Essential

k beauty Fragrance Free Paraben Free Not Cruelty Free
67/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
7.1
Value for money
6.9
Suitability breadth
4.9
Irritation risk
Med
$23.00
0.67 oz / 19 g
Data confidence
Low confidence
Made in
South Korea
Launched
2025
Best season
spring-
PAO
12 mo.
after opening
Alex Brufsky
Alex Brufsky Founder & Editor
Analysis by DermFND · Last verified May 2026 · Methodology
Verified reviewer
01 · Quick read

Pros & cons.

What we love
  • +Truly transparent application with zero white cast on all skin tones
  • +Matte, non-greasy finish with genuine oil-absorbing properties from silicone microbeads
  • +Skincare additions (vitamin C, panthenol, hyaluronic acid) elevate it beyond basic SPF
  • +Fragrance-free formula minimizes sensitization risk from non-UV-filter ingredients
  • +Portable pocket-sized format ideal for midday reapplication over makeup
  • +Water and sweat resistant for outdoor activities
What to know
  • Small 19g size depletes quickly with recommended reapplication frequency
  • Contains isopropyl palmitate with a comedogenicity rating of 4/5
  • Chemical UV filters exclude sensitive skin, rosacea-prone users, and pregnant individuals
  • Very limited review data as a 2025 launch — long-term performance unverified
  • Not fungal acne safe due to isopropyl palmitate and synthetic wax
  • Higher cost-per-use than full-size liquid sunscreens at comparable SPF levels
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

The dirty secret of sunscreen sticks is that most of them feel like drawing on your face with a crayon. The waxy drag, the heavy coating, the peculiar sensation of having applied something that clearly has no intention of absorbing — these are the compromises that stick sunscreens have traditionally demanded in exchange for their portability. COSRX’s entry into this category suggests the brand was not interested in making those compromises.

The Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick, launched in 2025, approaches the stick format with the same ‘Cosmetics + RX’ philosophy that made the brand’s snail mucin line a global phenomenon: strip away the unnecessary, keep what works, and make the texture so pleasant that compliance becomes effortless. For a product category defined by its inconvenience, that is a quietly ambitious goal.

The formula relies on three FDA-registered chemical UV filters — avobenzone at 2.80% for UVA1 protection, homosalate at 11.00% carrying the primary UVB burden, and octocrylene at 7.50% pulling double duty as both a UVB filter and an avobenzone stabilizer. This is a standard and proven combination, used in countless sunscreens worldwide. It is not innovative, but it is reliable. The octocrylene-avobenzone partnership is particularly important in a stick format designed for outdoor reapplication: without octocrylene’s photostabilizing effect, avobenzone would degrade under UV exposure within hours, leaving gaps in UVA protection precisely when you need it most.

What elevates this formula beyond a basic sunscreen stick is the supporting cast. 3-O-Ethyl Ascorbic Acid — a stable vitamin C derivative — provides antioxidant defense against the free radicals that UV exposure generates even when sunscreen is properly applied. Panthenol soothes and supports the skin barrier, counteracting the drying effect that some chemical filters can produce. Sodium hyaluronate adds lightweight hydration, and tocopheryl acetate (vitamin E) provides additional antioxidant coverage. These are not transformative actives at the concentrations present here, but they represent a thoughtful step beyond the bare minimum that most stick sunscreens offer.

The texture is the product’s strongest argument for existence. Polymethylsilsesquioxane — spherical silicone microbeads — creates a matte, oil-absorbing finish that genuinely controls shine without the chalky dryness of mattifying powders. The stick glides on smoothly, absorbs quickly, and leaves behind something that feels like a very light primer rather than a sunscreen. For oily and combination skin types who have spent years dreading midday reapplication because every sunscreen they have tried turned their T-zone into a reflecting pool, this texture is revelatory.

There is absolutely zero white cast. As a purely chemical sunscreen with no mineral filters, it applies transparently on all skin tones. This alone makes it a better reapplication option than many competing sticks that use zinc oxide or titanium dioxide and leave a ghostly sheen over makeup.

Honesty requires acknowledging the limitations, and there are several. First: the size. At 19 grams, this is a small product. If you are using it for full-face reapplication throughout the day — as dermatologists recommend every 2 hours during sun exposure — you will go through it in three to four weeks. At $23, the cost-per-use math is not favorable for heavy users. This is a convenience product, and convenience has a price premium.

Second: the ingredient list includes isopropyl palmitate, which carries a comedogenicity rating of 4 out of 5. For acne-prone users, this is a genuine concern. It is a common emollient in stick formulations because it contributes to smooth glide, but its presence here means that acne-prone skin should patch test before committing to daily use.

Third: this is exclusively a chemical sunscreen. The combination of homosalate, octocrylene, and avobenzone is proven and effective, but it excludes anyone who prefers or requires mineral UV filters — including pregnant individuals, for whom dermatologists generally recommend zinc oxide or titanium dioxide formulations. Chemical filters can also trigger sensitization in reactive skin types, making this a poor fit for rosacea-prone or highly sensitive skin.

The product is too new for meaningful long-term user data. Launched in 2025 with fewer than 20 reviews available at the time of writing, the social proof is essentially nonexistent. The early feedback is uniformly positive — praising the matte finish, transparency, and portability — but a sample size of 14 Ulta reviews does not constitute evidence. We are scoring this primarily on ingredient analysis and formulation quality, with the acknowledgment that real-world performance data will either validate or complicate this assessment over the coming months.

For what it is designed to do — provide portable, no-fuss, no-white-cast SPF 50 reapplication with a matte finish — the COSRX Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick does it well. It is not a primary sunscreen for heavy sun exposure; it is a pocket companion for the person who wants to reapply at lunch without restarting their skincare routine. In that specific role, it justifies its existence and its price point. In any broader role, the small size, chemical-only filter system, and comedogenic potential start to work against it.

Formula

About Honest Beauty

Established Brand (5-20 years)

03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
Avobenzone (2.80%)](/ingredients/avobenzone) (2.80%)
The primary UVA1 filter in this formula, providing broad-spectrum protection against the longer-wavelength UV rays responsible for photoaging and hyperpigmentation. Stabilized here by octocrylene, which prevents avobenzone's notorious photodegradation — ensuring consistent UVA protection throughout the wear period.
Well Established
OK
Homosalate (11.00%)](/ingredients/homosalate) (11.00%)
The highest-concentration active in this stick, providing robust UVB protection across the 295-315nm range. At 11%, it carries the primary burden of SPF 50 protection, working alongside octocrylene and avobenzone to achieve broad-spectrum coverage in a format light enough for the stick's airy texture.
Well Established
OK
Octocrylene (7.50%)](/ingredients/octocrylene) (7.50%)
Serves dual duty as both a UVB/partial UVA2 filter and an avobenzone stabilizer. Without octocrylene, avobenzone would degrade under UV exposure within hours, significantly reducing UVA protection. This photostabilizing role is critical in a stick format designed for outdoor reapplication.
Well Established
OK
A stable vitamin C derivative that provides antioxidant defense against UV-generated free radicals that slip past the sunscreen filters. Unlike pure ascorbic acid, this form resists oxidation in the stick's anhydrous (water-free) environment, maintaining potency throughout the product's shelf life.
Promising
OK
Provitamin B5 provides soothing and barrier-repair support for sun-exposed skin. In this sunscreen stick, it addresses the drying effect that some chemical UV filters can have, maintaining skin comfort during extended outdoor wear.
Well Established
OK
Full INCI list

Active Ingredients: Avobenzone 2.80%, Homosalate 11.00%, Octocrylene 7.50%. Inactive Ingredients: Diethylhexyl Carbonate, Methyl Methacrylate Crosspolymer, Synthetic Wax, Dimethicone, Dimethicone/Vinyl Dimethicone Crosspolymer, Ethylhexyl Salicylate, Butyloctyl Salicylate, Isopropyl Palmitate, Diisostearyl Malate, Dimethiconol, Trisiloxane, Diphenylsiloxy Phenyl Trimethicone, Ethylhexyl Isononanoate, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Polyethylene, Polymethylsilsesquioxane, Bis-Behenyl/Isostearyl/Phytosteryl Dimer Dilinoleyl Dimer Dilinoleate, Ethylene/Propylene Copolymer, Camellia Japonica Seed Oil, Silica Dimethyl Silylate, Dimethicone Crosspolymer, Candelilla Wax Esters, Copernicia Cerifera (Carnauba) Wax, 3-O-Ethyl Ascorbic Acid, Panthenol, Sodium Hyaluronate, Tocopheryl Acetate

Product flags
✓ Fragrance Free ✓ Alcohol Free ✗ Oil Free ✗ Silicone Free ✓ Paraben Free ✓ Sulfate Free ✗ Cruelty Free ✗ Vegan ✗ Fungal Acne Safe
Potential irritants
Chemical UV filters (avobenzone, homosalate, octocrylene) may sensitize reactive skin
04 · Compatibility

Skin match.

Pairs well with
Lightweight moisturizer underneathSetting powder on top for extra mattifying
Skin types
Best for
oilycombinationnormal
Works for
dry
Not ideal for
sensitive
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

This stick's UV protection system uses three well-studied chemical filters. Avobenzone (butyl methoxydibenzoylmethane) is the US-market gold standard for UVA1 protection, absorbing UV radiation in the 310-400nm range—the wavelengths that drive photoaging and melanoma risk. Its main weakness is photolability: avobenzone degrades under UV light, losing up to 90% of its UV-absorbing capacity within one hour without stabilization.

Octocrylene at 7.50% fixes this. Research shows octocrylene forms a photostable complex with avobenzone, which slows its degradation and maintains UVA protection during wear. A study in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology found that octocrylene-stabilized avobenzone formulations keep significantly higher UVA protection factors than unstabilized formulations after equal UV exposure.

Homosalate at 11.00% provides the UVB (295-315nm) protection backbone. While the EU scrutinizes homosalate for potential endocrine disruption, the FDA classifies it as Category I (safe and effective) at concentrations up to 15%. This 11% concentration stays within established safety parameters.

The 3-O-Ethyl Ascorbic Acid adds a logical antioxidant layer. UV exposure generates reactive oxygen species even when sunscreen filters absorb most incoming UV radiation. Research in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology shows that combining antioxidants with UV filters provides synergistic photoprotection—the antioxidants neutralize free radicals that UV filters cannot entirely prevent. This makes the vitamin C derivative a functional complement to the UV filter system, not just a marketing addition.

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists would see this as a competent, conventional chemical UV filter combination that uses a stick format to help with reapplication compliance. Board-certified dermatologists emphasize that the most effective sunscreen is the one patients actually reapply—and stick formats make midday reapplication easier by removing the need for hand washing, pump dispensing, or disturbing makeup. The chemical-only filter system limits use for patients with sensitive or reactive skin, who typically need mineral filters. Dermatologists would also flag isopropyl palmitate as a concern for acne-prone patients. However, for oily-skinned patients wanting a convenient reapplication format, the matte finish and transparent application make this a reasonable recommendation alongside a primary morning sunscreen application of adequate volume.

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 Toner
03 Serum
04 Lightweight moisturizer
05 COSRX Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick This product
PM routine
01 Double cleanse (to remove sunscreen)
02 Toner
03 Treatment
04 Moisturizer
How to use

Apply a thick layer as the last step of your morning skincare routine, after moisturizer. Swipe the stick across the face in 3-4 passes per area for full coverage. Cover often-missed areas: nose bridge, ears, and hairline. Reapply every 2 hours during direct sun exposure or after swimming, sweating, or toweling off. Use light, gentle strokes for over-makeup reapplication to avoid disrupting your base. Store the stick in a cool, dry place so it does not soften.

Value assessment

At $23 for 19g, this sunscreen stick costs more. The small size requires frequent replacement for daily users. Convenience, not economy, defines its value: carry this in your pocket for midday reapplication rather than using it as your primary morning application. The COSRX sits in a middle ground between the Supergoop! Unseen Sunscreen Stick ($34/15g) and Sun Bum ($13/13g). It costs less per gram than luxury options and includes skincare additions that budget sticks lack. For users who reapply because of this product's texture and portability, the value is the UV protection compliance it enables.

Who should buy

Oily and combination skin types needing a matte, non-greasy sunscreen for daytime reapplication. People who struggle with sunscreen compliance because liquid formulas are hard to reapply over makeup. Active individuals wanting a pocket-sized, water-resistant SPF for outdoor activities.

Who should skip

Pregnant individuals should use mineral sunscreens instead. Acne-prone users must watch for the isopropyl palmitate content. Mineral alternatives work better for sensitive skin reactive to chemical UV filters. The small size makes this an impractical, expensive choice for anyone seeking a primary, full-coverage sunscreen application.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Scent

No added fragrance — minimal neutral scent from the formula base.

Packaging

Compact twist-up stick tube fits in a pocket. This standard sunscreen stick format is easy to carry in a bag for reapplication throughout the day.

First use

The stick glides on transparently with zero white cast on first application. The finish is matte and comfortable, not greasy or waxy. Skin feels smooth and lightly set instead of coated. The small size feels noticeable in hand but fits in a pocket or small bag.

How long it lasts

3-4 weeks with daily facial use and reapplication

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

spring summer

Finish
mattenon-greasyinvisiblelightweight
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

The Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick is a 2025 addition to COSRX's expanding sun protection line, designed specifically for the growing demand for portable reapplication formats. As sunscreen awareness increases globally — and dermatologists emphasize the importance of reapplying every 2 hours — COSRX developed this pocket-sized stick to make compliance convenient, particularly for oily skin types who dread midday greasiness.

About COSRX

Established Brand (5–20 years)

COSRX launched in 2013 with a philosophy of minimal, effective formulations (the name stands for 'Cosmetics + RX'). Over 11 years, the brand has built a reputation for ingredient-forward products dermatologists praise, and AmorePacific acquired it in 2023.

Brand founded: 2013 · Product launched: 2025
10 · Common questions

FAQ.

Does the COSRX Airy-Light Clear Sunscreen Stick leave a white cast?

No — this is a chemical (organic) sunscreen with no mineral filters like zinc oxide or titanium dioxide. It applies completely transparent and works on all skin tones without any white cast or discoloration.

Can I apply this sunscreen stick over makeup?

Yes — the stick format works for reapplication over makeup. Glide it gently over your face without heavy pressure; the transparent formula won't disturb your makeup. This makes it ideal for midday sunscreen reapplication.

Is the COSRX Clear Sunscreen Stick pregnancy safe?

This sunscreen uses chemical UV filters (homosalate, octocrylene, avobenzone). Some dermatologists recommend avoiding these during pregnancy because they may absorb systemically. Mineral sunscreens with zinc oxide or titanium dioxide are the standard preference during pregnancy. Consult your OB-GYN for personalized guidance.

How often should I reapply this sunscreen stick?

Reapply every 2 hours in direct sun, or right after swimming, sweating, or toweling off. For daily wear with little sun, reapply at midday at a minimum. Dermatologists recommend 3-4 passes over each face area for adequate coverage with stick sunscreens.

Is this sunscreen stick fungal acne safe?

No — this formula contains isopropyl palmitate and synthetic wax, both of which can potentially feed Malassezia yeast. If you are prone to fungal acne, look for a sunscreen specifically formulated without these ingredients.

Community

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"No white cast — truly transparent on all skin tones"

"Lightweight matte finish controls oil effectively"

"Portable and convenient for on-the-go reapplication"

"Does not pill or interfere with makeup"

"Water and sweat resistant"

Common complaints

"Small 19g size runs out quickly with regular use"

"Chemical UV filters may not suit sensitive or reactive skin"

"Contains isopropyl palmitate which may break out acne-prone users"

"Limited review data as product is very new"

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