An Australian sunscreen brand has voluntarily stopped selling one of its products while it waits for new testing results on the SPF results.

Naked Sundays, a brand started by TV journalist Samantha Brett, said it will pause the sale of its Collagen Mineral sunscreen “out of precaution.”

It comes after consumer company Choice found that out of 20 popular sunscreens on the market, 16 of them failed to meet their SPF claims.

An Australian sunscreen brand has stopped selling one of its products while it waits for new testing results on the SPF. Naked Sundays, the brand started by TV journalist Samantha Brett said it will pause the sale of its Collagen Mineral sunscreen "out of precaution." An Australian sunscreen brand has stopped selling one of its products while it waits for new testing results on the SPF. Naked Sundays, the brand started by TV journalist Samantha Brett said it will pause the sale of its Collagen Mineral sunscreen “out of precaution.” (Supplied)

Naked Sundays was not one of those tested in the research and no claims have been made that it doesn’t match up to the SPF it’s being sold as having.

The company says while lab tests confirmed the $39.99 product, made both in Australia, and in the USA, met the SPF50 claims, it is waiting for more guidance.

“We are pleased to report that preliminary SPF results from a new independent lab for our Collagen Mineral produced by our US manufacturer, has returned preliminary results to support the label claim of SPF50,” it said in a statement.

“We’ve since updated our listing with the TGA, for this version to be available locally in the coming days.

Samantha Brett from Naked Sundays.Samantha Brett from Naked Sundays. (Edwina Pickles)

“Till then we’ve paused the mineral from sale in Australia out of precaution, while we await new, complete independent SPF results, and subsequent guidance from the TGA on their investigation into SPF testing.

“This precautionary pause only affects our Collagen Glow Mineral produced by one Australian manufacturer, and no other products in our range have been impacted.”

MECCA, the cosmetics shop where the brand is sold, said customers can get a refund.

“MECCA and Naked Sundays have jointly made the decision to remove the SPF50+ Collagen Glow 100% Mineral Perfecting Priming Lotion (20ml, 50ml, 80ml) from sale, effective immediately,” it said.

“Although there is currently no requirement to officially recall the product, we believe removing it from sale is the right thing to do until the retesting is complete.”

Ultra Violette Lean Screen.Last week Australian sunscreen brand Ultra Violette pulled one of its products from shelves and is offering customer refunds over “concerning discrepancies” in SPF testing results. (Instagram/@ultravioletteau)Founders Rebecca Jefferd and Ava Matthews last week issued a statement apologising that the product had “fallen short of the standards we pride ourselves on”.

Choice wants watchdogs the TGA and the ACCC to investigate sunscreen brands across Australia to make sure sunscreen safety matches people’s expectations

TGA said in a statement it is reviewing existing SPF testing requirements.