Tanning timing guide

Best Time To Tan

The best time to tan is not a fixed clock time. It is the lowest UV window that still matches your goal, avoids the daily UV peak, and gives you enough time to stop before redness starts.

Tanning window planner

Start with the hourly UV curve, then adjust for skin type, SPF, cloud cover, and whether you can reapply sunscreen.

Sample

High UV window

Avoid the peak if tanning. Use shade, broad-spectrum SPF, clothing, and a timer.

Sample forecast No provider key in browser Estimates, not medical advice
8a
10a
12p
2p
4p
6p
Peak UV Avoid: EPA links shorter shadows around midday with higher UV exposure.
Hourly UV Prefer: Use the actual curve, not generic morning/noon rules.
No safe tan Remember: TanPilot frames exposure as risk-managed, not risk-free.

A practical tanning timing rule

Pick a window where UV is present but not at the highest band of the day. For many locations this means earlier morning or later afternoon, but the right answer depends on season, latitude, altitude, clouds, reflection, and your skin.

  • UV 0-2

    Usually too low for meaningful tanning progress, though reflection and sensitive skin still deserve care.

  • UV 3-5

    Often the most manageable band for a short, monitored tanning window with protection.

  • UV 6+

    Burn timing gets shorter. TanPilot should shift from “how long can I tan?” to “how do I reduce burn risk?”

Why TanPilot does not promise safe tanning

UV exposure can produce vitamin D in small amounts, but WHO also links excessive UV exposure with sunburn, skin cancer, cataracts, and premature skin aging. The product language stays conservative: smarter planning, reduced burn risk, and estimates.

UV bands TanPilot uses

These bands anchor the advice language across timing, SPF, and burn-risk pages.

UV Index Band TanPilot planning guidance
0-2 Low Usually lower risk for the average adult, with extra care still useful around reflection, altitude, or very sun-sensitive skin.
3-5 Moderate Protection starts to matter. WHO recommends sun protection when the UV Index is 3 or higher.
6-7 High Plan shorter exposure windows, avoid the daily peak, and use shade, clothing, sunglasses, and broad-spectrum sunscreen.
8-10 Very high Burn risk can rise quickly, especially near midday. Treat tanning time as a short, monitored exposure.
11+ Extreme Extra protection is needed. TanPilot should nudge toward shade-first planning rather than longer exposure.

Questions

Short answers for the exact search intent, without hiding the safety caveats.

Is morning or afternoon better for tanning?

Usually the better window is outside the daily UV peak, which often means morning or late afternoon. Check the hourly UV curve because season and location change the answer.

Can you tan with sunscreen?

Sunscreen reduces UV reaching skin but does not make outdoor time unlimited. FDA advises broad-spectrum SPF with other protective measures and reapplication at least every two hours.

What UV Index is too high to tan?

Very high and extreme bands, usually UV 8 and above, can shorten burn time sharply. TanPilot should push toward shade-first planning in those windows.