Self-Tanner Looks Dark on Ankles
Self-tanner grabs dark on ankles because the skin is drier and thicker there. Buff the edge, dilute the next coat, and protect dry spots with lotion first.
Part of body beauty fixes and patchy beauty fixes .

What you'll need
- gentle body scrub
- body lotion
- tanning mitt
- gradual tanner
Why it happened
Tanner reacts with dead surface cells. Ankles, heels, knees, and elbows usually have drier, thicker skin, so they hold more DHA and develop darker than smoother areas. Lotion dilutes the tanner and blocks it from grabbing too much.
The fix
- 1buff the dark edge with a damp washcloth or gentle scrub for 30 seconds
- 2apply body lotion over ankles, heels, and knees before adding any more tanner
- 3use leftover product on the mitt for ankles instead of a fresh pump
If it's still wrong
- Use a tan remover on only the darkest edge, then moisturize.
- Blend a gradual tanner over the leg for two nights instead of reapplying full-strength mousse.
Prevent next time
- Exfoliate and moisturize dry joints the day before tanning.
- Bend ankles while applying so product does not collect in creases.
Notes
Why this works
Dark ankles happen because self-tanner is responding to skin texture, not just application skill. DHA develops most strongly where there are more dry surface cells. Ankles have creases, thicker skin, and less natural oil, so a normal amount of tanner can become concentrated there.
Gentle buffing removes some of the overdeveloped top layer without stripping the whole tan. Lotion acts like a soft barrier for the next application, so the ankle receives a diluted amount. Using only the leftover product on the mitt keeps the color connected to the leg without creating a new dark ring.
Substitutions
- gentle body scrub→a damp washcloth with body wash
- gradual tanner→body lotion mixed with a small amount of regular self-tanner
More patchy fixes
Other body fixes