Travel

Mountains and Hiking: Wind, Dryness, High SPF

At altitude the sun is stronger, while wind and cold dry the skin. A look at stepped-up sun protection, richer moisture and lip care in the mountains and on the trail.

Notela Editorial

In the mountains two things work against your skin: the sun is stronger at altitude, and wind and cold pull out moisture. So the base gets stepped-up sun protection and richer hydration. Here's the kit for a hike and a mountain trip.

In short

At altitude UV rises by about 10% per 1000 m, and snow reflects light strongly so SPF goes higher, with mandatory reapplication, and a stick is handy. Wind and cold dry the skin: a rich cream, a lip balm and cover for exposed areas. Sunglasses and a hat are essential.

01The sun at altitude

The higher you go, the thinner the atmosphere and the stronger the UV: according to the WHO, radiation rises by about 10% per 1000 m of ascent. Snow reflects a large share of the rays, adding to the load. So take a broad-spectrum SPF, apply it generously and reapply every 2 hours a stick is especially handy on the trail. Don't forget ears, neck and the backs of the hands. See also why you need SPF.

  • Broad-spectrum SPF, generously; reapply every 2 hours, a stick is handy.
  • Snow and altitude boost UV protection is needed even in the cold.
  • Sunglasses with UV protection and a hat.
  • Exposed areas: ears, neck, backs of the hands.

02Wind, cold and dryness

Wind and low humidity pull out moisture; skin roughens and flakes. What helps is a richer cream than in the city and a lip balm reapplied often. In strong wind and frost, a rich protective product (a butter or balm) on the cheeks and nose does the job. On basic hydration: how to hydrate your skin.

Rich creamLip balmCover for cheeks and noseSPF stick

03Common mistakes

  • The same SPF as in the city, with no reapplication. At altitude and on snow you need more protection.
  • A light cream in the wind. It won't hold moisture in dry, cold air.
  • No sunglasses or hat. UV is stronger at altitude.
  • Ignoring lips. In wind and frost they crack first.

04Common questions

Why is it easier to burn in the mountains?

At altitude the atmosphere is thinner and filters less UV — about +10% per 1000 m according to the WHO. Snow additionally reflects the rays, adding to the load on the skin.

What cream should I take hiking?

A richer one than your city cream: it holds moisture better in dry, windy air. For exposed areas in the cold, a protective butter or balm.

05What to pack

A kit for the mountains and hiking. Links lead to YesStyle.
Protection

Broad-spectrum SPF, stick

Easy to reapply on the trail.

Link coming soon
Moisturiser

Rich cream

Holds moisture in wind and cold.

Link coming soon
Barrier

Protective butter or balm

On cheeks and nose in strong wind.

Link coming soon
Lips

Lip balm (ideally with SPF)

Against cracking in wind and frost.

Link coming soon

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This material is educational and does not replace a consultation with a dermatologist.