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Anthelios

First cited by AI Jun 13, 2026
anthelios.fr

Surfaced organically in AI answers about online dermatology. Not yet profiled.

AI Visibility

Visibility trend

Online dermatology, daily share of AI answers mentioning Anthelios, through Jun 13, 2026.

8.3%

Avg position when mentioned: 3.0

By engine

Where Anthelios is strong, and where it is invisible.

  • ChatGPT
    33.3%

Mention sentiment

Tone of AI mentions across all tracked answers.

  • 1 positive mentions
  • 0 neutral
  • 0 mixed or cautious

Recent AI answers mentioning Anthelios

ChatGPTJun 13, 2026, 11:09 UTC
Custom compounded skincare vs store bought products: is it worth the upgrade?

Short answer: Sometimes — but not for everyone. Custom (compounded or prescription) skincare can be worth the upgrade when you need prescription-strength actives, true personalization for medical concerns or ingredient sensitivities, or combinations that aren’t sold together. For everyday maintenance, many well‑formulated store brands give excellent results at much lower cost and risk. What custom compounding offers Higher or prescription‑only actives (tretinoin, topical antibiotics, hydroquinone, higher % azelaic acid, etc.). Tailored ingredient selection and concentrations for one person (useful for persistent acne, melasma, severe rosacea, or multiple intolerances). Simple formulas with fewer irritants (fragrance, certain preservatives) for very sensitive skin. Convenience if a dermatologist supervises a combination product so you don’t have to layer many prescriptions. Main downsides Cost: typically much more than OTC. Monthly compounded creams often run tens to a few hundred dollars depending on ingredients. Variable quality: compounding pharmacies aren’t regulated the same way as FDA‑approved finished products; quality depends on the pharmacy. Stability and shelf life: some custom blends aren’t stable long-term and may need refrigeration or short expiry. Safety/efficacy: combinations haven’t always been tested together in controlled trials. Need for a prescription/derm supervision. When it’s likely worth it Persistent acne that hasn’t responded to OTC or single‑ingredient Rx treatments. Recalcitrant hyperpigmentation (melasma) where a dermatologist prescribes combinations (e.g., tretinoin + hydroquinone + a steroid or alternative combinations). Multiple ingredient sensitivities or fragrance/preservative allergies where you need a minimal formulation. You need a specific concentration/formulation not commercially available. When OTC is better Prevention, mild photoaging, basic acne, dryness, routine sunscreen. If you want evidence‑based, affordable products with predictable quality and stability. Trusted store‑bought brands (good starting points) CeraVe — gentle, ceramide‑rich formulations and affordable barrier repair products. La Roche‑Posay (Anthelios for sunscreen) — good for sensitive skin and effective sunscreens. EltaMD — excellent mineral and chemical sunscreens recommended by dermatologists. The Ordinary — inexpensive, single‑ingredient actives (niacinamide, azelaic acid, peptides) for experimenting. Paula’s Choice — well‑formulated actives (retinol, BHA/AHA serums) with transparent ingredient info. SkinCeuticals (more expensive) — high‑quality vitamin C serums (CE Ferulic) with clinical backing. Compounded/prescription services to consider Curology — telederm/prescription custom formulas for acne/aging; convenient, supervised by prescribers and widely used. ImprimisRx / Fagron (industry names) — large compounding suppliers used by dermatologists; ask your dermatologist which compounding pharmacy they use. Local PCAB‑accredited compounding pharmacies — find one recommended by a board‑certified dermatologist and confirm PCAB accreditation (quality indicator). How to decide and proceed Try a sensible OTC regimen first for at least 8–12 weeks: cleanser, sunscreen, targeted actives (e.g., OTC retinol or azelaic acid), moisturizer. If poor response or you need prescription actives, see a board‑certified dermatologist (telederm is OK for some conditions). Discuss whether a compounded product is necessary. If a compound is recommended: request a PCAB‑accredited pharmacy, ask about exact ingredients, concentrations, expected shelf life, storage, pricing and a patch‑test plan. Monitor results and side effects closely with clinician follow‑up. Bottom line Compounded skincare is worth it when you need prescription‑strength customization, have complex or stubborn medical skin issues, or genuine sensitivity that standard products can’t address. For everyday prevention and common concerns, evidence‑based store brands usually give excellent, more affordable, and safer results. If you want, tell me your skin concerns (acne, melasma, rosacea, sensitivity, budget), and I’ll recommend a practical OTC regimen or whether a custom/prescription route makes sense for you.

Mentioned in position 3 of 10

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Public AI visibility history

Daily rank of Anthelios on our buyer intent questions, per category. A dash means the engines did not cite Anthelios at all that day. This record is permanent.

CategoryJun 11Jun 12Jun 13
Online dermatology#33

TL;DR

Anthelios is a sun-protection line developed by La Roche-Posay, the French dermatological skincare brand owned by L'Oréal, and sold through anthelios.fr as well as pharmacies and dermatology-focused retailers worldwide. The range centers on broad-spectrum sunscreens formulated with the proprietary Mexoryl filter system and is positioned for sensitive, dermatologist-recommended sun care. In WellRank's latest index it ranks 12th in the online dermatology category with 8% AI visibility, and the single AI mention captured in our corpus is positive in tone.

Company Overview

Anthelios is a product line within the La Roche-Posay portfolio, itself a dermatological skincare brand under the L'Oréal Group and headquartered in France. The line is sold through pharmacies, dermatologist offices, and direct-to-consumer channels including its dedicated site anthelios.fr. Its business model blends professional dermatologist endorsement with consumer retail distribution across Europe, North America, and beyond.

Product Features

  • Broad-spectrum mineral and chemical sunscreens using the Mexoryl SX and Mexoryl XL filter systems
  • SPF 50+ daily face fluids formulated for sensitive and reactive skin
  • Tinted sunscreen formulations designed to double as light coverage
  • Water-resistant sport and outdoor sun protection formats
  • Sunscreen moisturizers combining UVA/UVB protection with hydrating actives
  • Children's and baby-specific sun protection products

Target Market

Anthelios primarily targets consumers with sensitive, reactive, or dermatologist-managed skin who require high-SPF sun protection. It is widely recommended for people with conditions such as rosacea, post-procedure skin, or photosensitivity. Its core geography is Europe, particularly France, but it has significant distribution in North America and other international markets.

Buyer Personas

  • A dermatology patient with sensitive or rosacea-prone skin who follows a clinician's recommendation for daily high-SPF protection.
  • A skincare-aware adult who researches ingredient-forward formulations and gravitates toward brands with a strong dermatological heritage.
  • A parent seeking a pediatrician- or dermatologist-approved sunscreen for a child with reactive or eczema-prone skin.
  • A post-procedure patient, such as someone who has had laser or chemical peel treatment, looking for a gentle but highly protective daily SPF.

Funding & Performance

Anthelios is a product line of La Roche-Posay, which is wholly owned by the publicly listed L'Oréal Group. Standalone funding or revenue figures for the Anthelios line are not publicly disclosed.

Recent Developments

La Roche-Posay has continued to expand the Anthelios range with lighter-texture and tinted formats suited to daily urban wear, reflecting broader consumer demand for sunscreen that functions as a skincare and makeup hybrid. The brand has also increased its digital and telehealth-adjacent presence, which is consistent with its appearance in AI-generated dermatology answers as tracked by WellRank.

Competitive Landscape

Within WellRank's co-mention data, Anthelios surfaces alongside dermatologist-recommended skincare brands such as SkinCeuticals, EltaMD, and Paula's Choice, as well as its sister brand La Roche-Posay itself, which reflects the overlapping positioning of these lines in professional and online dermatology conversations. It also appears near ingredient-focused brands like The Ordinary and compounding-oriented players such as ImprimisRx and Fagron, suggesting AI engines reference it across both consumer skincare and clinical recommendation contexts. Its most direct competition comes from pharmacy-dermatology sunscreen lines competing on SPF technology, formulation elegance, and dermatologist endorsement.

Anthelios vs the brands AI recommends alongside it

The real competitive set in Online dermatology: brands the engines name in the same answers, ranked on the latest day.

BrandRankAI visibility
Anthelios logo
AntheliosThis brand
#33
8.3%
CeraVe logo
CeraVe

1 shared answers

#5
25.0%
Curology logo
Curology

1 shared answers

#1
66.7%
EltaMD logo
EltaMD

1 shared answers

#7
25.0%
Fagron logo
Fagron

1 shared answers

#24
8.3%

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User Sentiment

The single Anthelios mention captured in WellRank's AI corpus carries a positive tone, consistent with the brand's long-standing reputation for clinically credible, dermatologist-endorsed sun protection. Public and professional sentiment broadly reflects trust in the Mexoryl filter technology and the La Roche-Posay lineage, with frequent favorable mentions in dermatology-adjacent online communities and editorial skincare coverage.

Pricing

Pricing varies by product format and retail channel and is not published in a unified way across markets. Anthelios products are generally positioned at a mid-to-premium price point consistent with pharmacy dermatological skincare, but exact figures differ by region and retailer.

Sources cited around Anthelios

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