What UV index gives you a tan? A guide to UV levels & sun safety

The UV index tells you how strong the sun's ultraviolet radiation is right now. This guide walks through every level: when skin tans, when it burns, and how much protection you actually need.

Short answer: what UV gives you a tan?

Skin starts tanning once the UV index reaches about 3. The best balance between tanning and burn risk is UV 3–5. Above UV 6 skin tans quickly but burn risk rises sharply. From UV 8 upwards, skin damages faster than it tans – stay in the shade.

UV levels and how they affect your skin

Low

UV 0–2
Burning:
Skin only burns after very long exposure.
Tanning:
Tanning is slow or negligible.
Protection:
Sunglasses recommended. Sunscreen usually unnecessary.

Moderate

UV 3–5
Burning:
Fair skin burns in 30–45 minutes.
Tanning:
Best tanning range – skin tans before it burns.
Protection:
SPF 30, hat and sunglasses. Take breaks in the shade.

High

UV 6–7
Burning:
Skin burns in 20–30 minutes without protection.
Tanning:
Tanning is fast, but burn risk is already high.
Protection:
SPF 30–50, covering clothes. Avoid sun 11am–3pm.

Very high

UV 8–10
Burning:
Skin burns in 15–20 minutes.
Tanning:
Skin is damaged rather than tanned – sun exposure isn't recommended.
Protection:
SPF 50+, long sleeves, hat. Stay in the shade midday.

Extreme

UV 11+
Burning:
Skin can burn in under 10 minutes.
Tanning:
Don't try to tan – DNA damage and burns are certain.
Protection:
Avoid sunlight entirely. Full protection essential.

Frequently asked questions

Can you tan without burning?

Yes. Use SPF 30+ sunscreen, avoid 11am–3pm and take the sun in short sessions. Sunscreen slows tanning but doesn't prevent it – it protects against burning.

Can you tan on a cloudy day?

Yes. Up to 80% of UV radiation passes through thin clouds. Always check the current UV index – not just the weather.

What UV index is dangerous?

UV index 8 or higher is harmful without protection. At UV 11+ skin can burn in under 10 minutes, and repeated exposure raises skin cancer risk.

Do you need sunscreen in winter?

In most temperate regions winter UV is 0–2, so sunscreen isn't required. Snow and water reflect UV, however, so SPF 30 is recommended for skiing or in the mountains.

Check the UV index for your location

Use our real-time UV index meter to see the safest moment to head outside today.

See today's UV index →