A Skin Specialist Explains Why Every Self-Tanner You've Bought from Boots Made Your Spider Veins Worse — And the £16.99 Plant-Based Alternative She Now Recommends to Every Patient Over 55
Every week, women over 60 sit in front of me and say the same thing: "I've tried everything. Nothing works on my legs." They blame their skin. They shouldn't. Here's what nobody on that Boots shelf wants you to know.


AURA by MÁTERNA. The only self-tanner I recommend to my patients over 55. Now being shared between women on Facebook and in family WhatsApp groups across the country.
Let me tell you what I see every week. A woman in her 60s sits down in front of me. She's wearing trousers — always trousers, even when it's 28 degrees outside. She tells me about her legs. The spider veins behind her knees. The age spots on her calves. The patches from years of sun. And then she says the thing I've heard hundreds of times: "I've tried everything from Boots. Nothing works. I think my skin is just too old now."
Her skin is not too old. Her skin was never the problem. The problem is that every single bottle she picked up off that shelf contained a chemical compound that was never designed for her. And I'm going to explain exactly why — because once you understand this, you'll never waste another penny on a Boots self-tanner again.
And you'll understand why I now recommend one product, and one product only, to every patient over 55 who wants her legs back.
Every order comes with a 30-night money-back guarantee. If you don't see what you wanted by night 29, just email — refunded in full. No questions, no posting it back, no proof required.
Quick answers if you're skimming
Why do Boots tanners make spider veins worse?
Every self-tanner on the Boots shelf uses synthetic DHA — a compound designed for smooth, young skin. On mature skin, the DHA binds to areas of higher pigmentation like spider veins and age spots, making them darker and more visible. That's the chemistry. It's not your skin — it's the product.
What makes AURA different?
AURA uses no synthetic DHA. It's a plant-based formula that develops slowly overnight, laying evenly across spider veins and age spots instead of reacting with them. You control the depth by how many nights you apply.
Can I use it on my face and arms too?
Yes — AURA works beautifully on your face, arms, and body. But where it really shines is your legs. The spider veins and age spots blend into the tan rather than being highlighted.
What if I can't sit in the sun?
That's exactly who this was made for. Whether you're avoiding the sun for health reasons or simply because your skin doesn't recover the way it used to — AURA gives you a warm, natural glow without a single minute of sun exposure.
The compound on every Boots shelf that nobody told you about
Every self-tanner in Boots — every single one, from St Tropez to Bondi Sands to their own-brand — uses the same core chemistry. A compound called synthetic DHA. Dihydroxyacetone. It reacts with amino acids in the outermost layer of your skin to produce colour.
On young, smooth, even skin — a woman in her 20s — this reaction is uniform. The tan develops evenly because the skin surface is consistent. That's who it was designed for. That's who the formulation teams had in mind when they built it.
On your skin — skin with spider veins, age spots, sun damage, uneven pigmentation — the same compound does something very different. The DHA binds more aggressively to areas of higher pigmentation. Your spider veins don't blend. They darken. Your age spots don't fade. They deepen. The dry, textured patches around your knees and ankles catch the product unevenly. The result is streaky, patchy, and often orange.
This is not a flaw in your skin. This is a flaw in the formulation. A formulation that was never, at any point, designed for a woman over 55.
Why I tell my patients to avoid the sun — and what I recommend instead
Every summer, my phone doesn't stop. Every heatwave, the same conversation. I tell my patients over 60 the same thing: stay out of the sun during peak hours. Wear SPF 50. Cover up. Your skin doesn't recover the way it did at 40.
And every time, I get the same response: "But I just want a bit of colour on my legs."
I understand that. I really do. You've spent your whole life enjoying the sun. But after 60, the damage accumulates faster. Sun beds are even worse. So what's the alternative — just accept pale, veiny, spotty legs and cover them up every summer?
That's what most of my patients had accepted. Quietly. Privately. The same way you probably have. The trousers come out in May. They don't go back until October. Another summer hidden.
I spent years recommending nothing — because everything on the market made the problem worse. I'd see patients who'd tried a self-tanner from Boots and come back with darker spider veins, orange knees, and less confidence than when they started. I couldn't in good conscience recommend a product that I knew would fail on their skin.
Until I found AURA.
"The synthetic DHA used in standard mass-market self-tanners was formulated for younger, more uniform skin. On women over 50, it reacts differently — oxidising on areas of higher pigmentation like age spots and spider veins, making them darker and more visible rather than blending them. Without a slower-developing, buildable formula, results on mature skin almost always present as patchy, uneven, or orange."
— Adapted from dermatology literature on age-appropriate cosmetic formulation, 2024

"My husband asked if I'd been somewhere sunny. I had not. I'd just slept with AURA on."
Sandra, 64 — Leeds · Before and after overnight with AURA
What I now recommend to every patient over 55
AURA is the only self-tanner I recommend. Not because of marketing. Not because someone sent me a free bottle. Because it's the only product I've seen that actually works on mature skin with spider veins and age spots — without making them worse.
The formula uses no synthetic DHA. It's completely plant-based. It develops slowly overnight, which is the key difference. Instead of reacting aggressively with pigmented areas the way synthetic DHA does, it lays evenly across the entire surface — including over spider veins and age spots. They blend into the tan instead of standing out.
You apply it before bed. It goes on white — so you can see exactly where it's going. Dries in about 15 minutes. You go to sleep. By morning, you have a soft, even, warm glow. One night for a subtle warmth. Two nights for a deeper colour. Three for a full bronze. You control it completely.
No synthetic dyes. No parabens. No harsh fragrances. That's why there's zero smell — the "biscuit smell" from Boots tanners comes from the synthetic DHA reaction. AURA doesn't have one because the chemistry is fundamentally different.
It's also completely transfer-proof. Your sheets stay white. Your nightdress stays clean. And it works beautifully on your face, arms, and body too — but honestly, the legs are where my patients can't believe the difference. The spider veins just melt into the tan.
"I told Dr Rose I'd given up on ever showing my legs again. She recommended AURA. Three nights later I wore a dress to my walking group. I could have cried."

"The age spots on my calves had stopped me wearing a skirt for six years. After three nights of AURA they'd blended into the tan. I wore heels to my niece's wedding."
Judy, 68 — Birmingham · Before and after 3 nights with AURA
Quick skin check — 30 seconds
How has your skin been let down?
Answer 3 quick questions. I'll tell you exactly how AURA would work for your skin type.
Q1 — How long have you been covering your legs in summer?
Q2 — What concerns you most about your legs?
Q3 — Have you tried self-tanners before?
Your result
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