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Skincare · Review

Fenty Skin's Hydra Vizor Huez is hard to assess without an ingredient list

By bedro ·
Fenty Skin's Hydra Vizor Huez is hard to assess without an ingredient list

Fenty Skin's Hydra Vizor Huez positions itself as the tinted sibling to the brand's original Hydra Vizor mineral SPF, leaning on Fenty's signature wide shade range. Without a confirmed ingredient list in front of us — OpenBeautyFacts still has no INCI on file at the time of writing — this review is provisional. We can speak to category context and brand track record, but not to the specifics that usually drive a final score.

What it is

Hydra Vizor Huez is a tinted, hydrating sunscreen-moisturizer hybrid sold across multiple shades — the "Huez" naming nods to the inclusive shade matching Fenty is known for. It's pitched as a daily face SPF with light coverage, suitable as a no-makeup base or as a skin-evening step under makeup.

The original Hydra Vizor was a mineral (zinc-based) SPF 30. Whether Huez uses the same filter system or adds chemical filters for better cosmetic elegance in a tinted base is something the brand should disclose clearly on the product page. As of this review, no verified INCI is publicly indexed.

Key ingredients

We can't responsibly itemize the formula without the INCI. What we'd want to confirm before scoring higher: the active filter system (mineral zinc/titanium vs. chemical filters like avobenzone and octinoxate vs. a hybrid), the SPF number and broad-spectrum status, and whether the tint comes from iron oxides. Iron oxides matter here — they add visible-light and blue-light protection that UV filters alone don't provide, which is particularly relevant for melasma and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation on deeper skin tones.

We'd also want to see how the hydration claim is supported — typically glycerin, a humectant blend, or something like niacinamide — and whether there's added fragrance or essential oils, which are common irritant triggers in this category. Full ingredient list was not available at the time of review. We'll revise this piece once it is.

Who it's for

If you've struggled to find a tinted SPF that matches deeper or warm-undertoned skin without going gray or orange, Fenty is one of the few brands with a genuine commitment to that range, and Huez is worth a shade test on that basis alone. It also makes sense for people who want a one-step morning routine — moisturizer, SPF, and light evening of tone in a single product.

Skip it, or at least patch test carefully, if you have reactive or fragrance-sensitive skin and the brand hasn't published the ingredient list where you can see it. Same goes if you need a high, clearly-labeled broad-spectrum rating for medical reasons (post-procedure, melasma, photosensitizing meds) — you want a sunscreen whose specs are easy to verify.

The verdict

On concept and shade inclusivity, Hydra Vizor Huez is doing something the tinted-SPF category badly needs. On formulation, we're holding the score at a cautious 6.8 because we can't see the ingredient list, can't confirm the filter system, and don't want to over-credit a product on brand reputation alone. If Fenty publishes a full INCI and the formula holds up — especially with iron oxides and a clearly labeled broad-spectrum rating — this could easily climb into the 7.5–8 range. For now: try it in store, check the shade, and read the label before you commit.


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