Australia's Beauty Authority · April 2026 Sign in Premium Newsletter
Vol. 01 · Issue 04 Glow. Australia · Est. 2014
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What is DHA?

The single molecule that powers every mainstream self-tan. How it works, where it came from, and why some formulas produce better results than others.

DHA stands for dihydroxyacetone. It's a three-carbon sugar that reacts with amino acids in the top layer of skin to produce a temporary brown pigment called melanoidin. Every major self-tanner on the AU market uses DHA as its primary active.

DHA was discovered by accident in the 1950s when a chemist noticed patients at a University of Cincinnati hospital had brown staining on their skin after being given DHA for glycogen-storage disease. Coppertone launched the first DHA self-tan in 1960.

The method

01.

How DHA produces colour

DHA applied to skin reacts with free amino acids in the stratum corneum (the outermost skin layer) via the Maillard reaction — the same chemical reaction that browns steak.

The reaction produces melanoidin, a brown pigment. It takes 2–8 hours to develop fully. It fades as skin cells shed naturally — usually 4–7 days.

02.

Why concentration matters

Self-tans typically contain 3–12% DHA. Drops and gradual lotions are lower (3–6%). Mousses are higher (8–12%).

Higher concentration = darker tan, but also more risk of patchy uptake. Premium brands (Loving Tan, St Tropez) pair high DHA with tone-correctors to avoid the orange cast that comes with raw high-DHA formulas.

03.

Why some formulas read orange

Cheap DHA oxidises warm. On top of that, some formulas pair DHA with erythrulose (a sister molecule) to deepen the colour further — but erythrulose also skews orange.

Premium formulas use purified DHA, lower erythrulose ratios, and counter-toners (usually green or purple pigments) to neutralise the orange.

04.

Is DHA safe?

For topical use, yes — decades of use and large population studies confirm no systemic absorption of concern. It is not approved for inhalation (which is why spray tan booth safety is debated) or ingestion (which would be a very weird thing to do).

DHA is safe for pregnancy, sensitive skin, and most health conditions. Always patch-test.

Common questions

Is DHA the same as the DHA in fish oil?

No. Fish-oil DHA is docosahexaenoic acid, a completely different molecule (an omega-3 fatty acid). Self-tan DHA is dihydroxyacetone, a sugar.

Does DHA damage skin?

No evidence of skin damage from topical DHA. Some concerns about oxidative stress with repeated daily use; most dermatologists consider this negligible relative to sun exposure.

Why does DHA smell?

The biscuit smell that develops 6–12 hours after application is the Maillard reaction producing volatile aldehydes. Higher-quality DHA reduces but doesn't eliminate this smell.