
What the product listing won't tell you
Know before you buy
This is a spray, and that is the heart of the tradeoff. Even a non-aerosol pump can be breathed in and tends to coat unevenly, so spray it into your hands first and rub it on, never mist it toward a child's face or into the wind. Families who want the safest possible format are better served by a mineral lotion or stick.
All Good
All Good Kids Mineral Sunscreen Spray SPF 30
All Good
All Good Kids Mineral Sunscreen Spray SPF 30
$21.00
We may earn a commission. It doesn't affect our scores.
You specifically want the speed of a spray for a wriggly kid who will not sit still for lotion
You will spray into your hands and rub it in, never directly at the face or into a breeze
You want a zinc oxide active with broad-spectrum SPF 30 and full 80-minute water resistance
You want the safest application format, in which case a mineral lotion or stick is the better choice
Fragrance sensitivity is a concern and you need a label that confirms it is fragrance-free
You want a non-nano guarantee, since the brand does not disclose the mineral particle size
Specs the product listing doesn't explain
Ease of use, maintenance, and longevity
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3 criteria - open any layer to see exactly what we found
“Will my kid breathe in the spray, or does it stay on her skin?”
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Criteria
Verified retailer - current pricing
Starting price
$21
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Already have an account? Sign inThe All Good Kids Mineral Sunscreen Spray SPF 30 was graded against the same sunscreen-specific rubric we apply to every product in this category — no brand-by-brand exceptions, no sponsored placements, no affiliate-weighted scores. The verdict above came from three pillars: safety (materials, certifications, recall history, chemical exposure pathways), efficacy (independent testing data, verified performance specs, real-world usage durability), and usability (ergonomics, cleaning, noise, parts availability over time). Every point deduction has a citation behind it. Every claim links back to a primary source. Nothing is hidden behind opaque badges.
What separates this from a typical sunscreen review elsewhere on the web: we don't accept sponsorships, paid placements, or rev-share-weighted rankings. The brand of the All Good Kids Mineral Sunscreen Spray SPF 30 cannot pay to move up the list. The score is logic-driven (a weighted formula across safety, efficacy, and usability), not opinion-driven, so an editor's personal preference cannot override the evidence. When two products in this category are within a point of each other, the right tie-breaker is whichever pillar matters most to your household — not whichever one ranks first.
A high safety score on the All Good Kids Mineral Sunscreen Spray SPF 30 doesn't automatically mean “buy this.” A sunscreen that's genuinely safe but loses points on efficacy may still be the wrong fit if performance is what you actually need. Conversely, a sunscreen that's usability-strong but safety-flagged probably isn't the right call for a child with a known sensitivity. The score is the start of the decision, not the end.
R3 is not a medical, legal, or financial advisor. This review is general consumer-safety reporting, not personalized health guidance. If a safety concern on this page intersects with a specific allergy, sensitivity, or medical condition in your household, talk to your pediatrician or a board-certified specialist — they can weigh the evidence against your family's situation in a way no review can. We'll update this page when credible new evidence changes the picture (a recall, a new lab certification, a meaningful product redesign); the last-updated date in the byline is the source of truth on how current this analysis is.
#9 of 9 sunscreens reviewed
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“Does SPF 30 really protect through swimming without constant reapplying?”
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“Does the white cast show obviously, and will it sting her eyes?”
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