Top 5 tanning oils to use this summer, ranked from best to worst
Here's what we found…
Let's be honest, summer is coming, and the quest for that sun-kissed glow will haunt every bathroom again. The problem? Between self-tanners that turn orange, monoi-based oils that stick to the skin, and sprays that smell of synthetic coconut, finding the right formula has become a real headache.
Over the past 3 months, I tested 14 of the most popular tanning products on the market, on fair skin, golden skin, under the sun and in UV booths. Here are the 5 that survived my shortlist, ranked from best to worst.
After 3 months of intensive testing on 18 testers aged 22 to 48, we're ready to share our verdict. Here are the 5 best tanning products of 2026, judged on strict criteria we defined from the start:
We measured how long it takes to achieve a uniform, natural tan, on the same tester, under the same conditions, over 4 weeks. Some formulas delivered a golden result from the second application. Others left the skin yellow, blotchy, or with a 'tanning booth' effect.
We scrutinised each product: presence of natural oils (argan, monoi, coconut, carrot), absence of silicones, parabens, dubious preservatives. A good tanning oil should nourish the skin, not just tint it.
An oil that's sticky, greasy, transfers onto clothes, or smells of cheap coconut is a deal-breaker. We judged each product on touch, absorption speed, and water resistance.
The price of a tanning oil in 2026 ranges from €9 (drugstore) to €70 (luxury). But paying more guarantees nothing — one of our best scores came from a recent French brand, and the worst product we tested still cost €49.
The undisputed favourite of this ranking. While most so-called 'tanning' oils stick to recipes dating from the 80s — coconut oil, synthetic fragrance, cosmetic SPF 6 — Rovelle Paris took a radically different approach: a next-generation self-tanning serum with DHA, the gold-standard active used by pro brands like St Tropez, Bondi Sands or Tan-Luxe.
Concretely, it changes everything. No sun needed. No baking on the beach for hours. You apply a few drops in the evening before bed, and you wake up with a tanned, golden, perfectly even complexion. The formula combines scientifically dosed DHA with vegetable glycerin (a humectant that hydrates 6× its mass in water) and a patented guide-color complex — the visible pigments at application that let you see exactly where you're putting the product. Result: zero missed zones, zero streaks, zero 'patchwork' effect typical of cheap self-tanners.
The packaging matches the formula — amber glass bottle, golden cap, dropper pipette for precise drop-by-drop dosing. It's the vanity object you proudly display on your shelf, not the plastic tube hidden in the bathroom drawer. At €54.99, it's also significantly cheaper than equivalent pro brands — St Tropez Self Tan Express costs €65 for the same active in packaging three times less beautiful.
Verdict after 6 weeks of testing: it's the only product in this ranking you can use just as easily in Paris in November as in Mykonos in July. All the others need sun to work. This one doesn't.
The unavoidable Hawaiian Tropic, found in every pharmacy for the last 30 years. The amber-brown packaging hasn't changed, neither has the coconut-hazelnut scent, and that's almost what we reproach it: you feel like you're using the same product your mother used on the beach in 1998.
Formula-wise, it's still decent: coconut oil, sun derivatives, SPF 6 (very low). The resulting tan is pretty, golden, but the greasy texture sticks to towels and stains light swimwear. Sensitive skin can react to the synthetic fragrance.
Last summer's Instagram star, the Greek Carroten gel made waves with its carrot-and-coconut-based 'tanning accelerator' effect. The promise? A tanned complexion in two afternoons under the sun. The reality, after our tests: yes… but only if you already have a tan base.
On fair skin, the result quickly turns orange, even dirty brown. On olive skin, the effect is pretty and fast. The gel texture is unusual, less greasy than an oil, but it leaves a slightly sticky film that doesn't appeal to everyone.
Presented as a 'US best-seller' by its brand, this Coconut Kisses + Maui Black duo promises an ultra-dark tan in a few applications. At €44.99, we're in the premium segment. But the result is… clearly disappointing.
The lotion is very thick, sticky, excessively fragranced (a mix of coconut + artificial caramel that smells of cheap tanning salon). The resulting tan is very orange, even khaki on some testers, with a 'streaky' effect difficult to fix. No mention of premium ingredients or certification — the formula is loaded with colourants and preservatives.
We end this ranking with a clear disappointment. The Bangberry 'sun butter', sold around €50 on Amazon, bets on a pineapple scent to seduce. The problem starts at opening: the texture is hard, almost waxy, and melts poorly on the skin.
Once applied, the result is yellow-greenish, greasy, and the skin stays sticky for hours. No absorption, no visible tan before the 5th application. And at that price, it's simply unacceptable. For the record, the brand markets 'natural ingredients' but none feature at the top of the INCI list — we're on pure marketing.