Sun, Skin and Nutrition

Your diet impacts your skin – you probably know that. In summer months this becomes even more relevant since your dietary choices determine how you support your UV resilience, collagen and healthy ageing from the inside out.

Your Skin Is Not Just a Surface

We spend a fortune on what we put on our skin: SPF, serums, antioxidant creams – and yet the most powerful protection and renewal system your skin has access to is the one built from the inside. What you eat directly determines how well your skin weathers UV exposure, how efficiently it repairs itself, how much collagen it can produce, and how quickly it ages. This is not a wellness platitude. It is straightforward biochemistry, and once you understand it, you will never look at your plate – or your sun lounger – quite the same way again.

What the Sun Actually Does to Skin

Sunlight is not the enemy. We need it for vitamin D synthesis, mood regulation, circadian rhythm, and – as Gerald Pollack’s research suggests – the formation of structured EZ water in our cells. But UV radiation, particularly UVA and UVB, also generates free radicals in the skin – unstable molecules that damage cell membranes, break down collagen, impair DNA repair, and accelerate the visible signs of ageing. The question is not how to avoid the sun entirely. It is how to support the body to handle it gracefully.

The answer, in large part, is antioxidants – and the body’s ability to use them depends almost entirely on what you have been eating.

Signs Your Skin May Be Nutritionally Underprepared for Sun

       Burns easily or takes a long time to recover from sun exposure

       Skin that looks dull, thin, or ‘crepe-y’ even without much sun history

       Slow wound healing or persistent redness after UV exposure

       Loss of elasticity, deepening lines, or sagging that feels premature

       Dry, flaky skin that worsens in summer despite drinking plenty

       Hyperpigmentation or uneven skin tone that keeps returning

 

What to Eat for UV Resilience and Radiant Skin

1.    Load up on carotenoids. Beta-carotene, lycopene, astaxanthin, and lutein are fat-soluble antioxidants that literally accumulate in the skin and act as an internal SPF. They absorb UV radiation, quench free radicals, and reduce inflammation from sun exposure. Carrots, sweet potato, tomatoes (especially cooked – heat increases lycopene availability), red and orange peppers, mango, and papaya are all rich sources. Astaxanthin – the pigment that makes salmon and prawns pink – is one of the most potent antioxidants known and has solid research behind it for reducing UV-induced skin damage. Always eat these with fat to absorb them properly.

2.    Prioritise vitamin C, every single day. Vitamin C is the master collagen co-factor – without it, the body cannot synthesise collagen at all. It is also a front-line antioxidant in the skin, depleted rapidly by UV exposure. Unlike many nutrients, it cannot be stored, so daily intake matters. Kiwi, red pepper, strawberries, broccoli, citrus, and parsley are all excellent sources. For those with significant sun exposure or skin ageing concerns, a supplement of 500 to 1000mg daily is well supported by research.

3.    Eat your healthy fats. The skin barrier – its ability to hold moisture, resist damage, and recover from UV stress – is made of fat. Omega-3 fatty acids, found in oily fish, walnuts, flaxseed, and chia seeds, reduce UV-induced inflammation, support skin cell membrane integrity, and have been shown to reduce the risk of UV-related DNA damage. Olive oil, avocado, and egg yolks provide vitamin E, which works synergistically with vitamin C to protect skin cell membranes from oxidative damage.

4.    Support collagen levels with food and nutrients from other sources. Collagen is the structural scaffolding of the skin – what keeps it firm, bouncy, and resilient. UV exposure breaks it down. Nutrition builds it back. Beyond vitamin C, collagen synthesis requires zinc (found in pumpkin seeds, meat, and shellfish), copper (in liver, nuts, and seeds), glycine (abundant in bone broth and slow-cooked meats), and silica (in oats, leeks, and cucumber). Collagen peptide supplements have good evidence behind them for improving skin elasticity and hydration, particularly from the age of 35 onwards when natural production begins to decline.

5.    Don’t underestimate polyphenols. Green tea, dark berries, pomegranate, dark chocolate, and red wine (in moderation) contain polyphenols that protect against UV-induced damage, support DNA repair mechanisms, and reduce skin inflammation. EGCG from green tea in particular has impressive research behind it for photoprotection. Two to three cups a day is a genuinely meaningful contribution to your skin’s resilience.

6.    Watch what accelerates ageing. Sugar and refined carbohydrates drive a process called glycation – where sugar molecules bind to collagen and elastin fibres, making them stiff, brittle, and prone to breakdown. Combined with UV exposure, glycation significantly accelerates visible skin ageing. Alcohol depletes zinc, vitamin C, and B vitamins – all critical for skin repair. Heated or hardened seed oils high in omega-6 (like sunflower or rapeseed), when consumed in excess, increase the inflammatory response to UV radiation. What you leave out of your diet matters as much as what you put in.

 

The Bottom Line

Your skin is a living record of how you have nourished yourself. The lines, the texture, the way it handles a sunny day – all of it reflects what has been happening on the inside, often for years before it becomes visible on the outside. The brilliant thing is that the skin is also remarkably responsive to change. Build an antioxidant-rich, collagen-supporting, anti-inflammatory diet and you are not just feeding your body – you are investing in the skin you will be living in for decades to come.

Sunscreen still matters. But so does your breakfast.

 

If you’d like to understand which nutritional gaps may be affecting your skin health and how to address them specifically, get in touch – this is exactly where functional nutrition makes a visible difference.