One person sits behind all of BronzeBooty, a woman named Laura who runs the whole thing as a personal passion project. That framing colours everything else on the site. BronzeBooty is not a brand with a marketing budget or a storefront. It is a tanning enthusiast writing down what she has learned across spray tans, tanning beds, sun exposure, and the bottled self-tanners that promise colour without UV. Knowing that up front helps you read the content for what it is: opinion and accumulated trial and error, not clinical guidance.
The range of topics on BronzeBooty is wider than you might expect from a one-author blog. Laura covers the four main routes to a tan and treats each as its own subject. There is indoor UV tanning with practical bed advice, outdoor sun tanning, spray tanning, and sunless or self-tanning products you apply yourself. She also writes about how tanning works at a chemical level, explaining DHA and how it reacts with skin, plus what UV exposure actually does. That science-leaning material sits next to far more practical pieces, which is the right mix for a reader who wants both the why and the how. BronzeBooty does not ration the detail either; the longer articles walk through prep and aftercare in a way that shorter content sites rarely bother with.
Product writing is a real part of what BronzeBooty offers. The site publishes tanning lotion reviews and evaluations of specific items, naming brands such as Designer Skin and its Ruby tanning lotion. Reviews like these are the hardest thing for a small site to do credibly, because a single author can only test so many products and gaps in personal experience tend to show in the writing. Whether Laura has actually used everything she covers is something a reader has to judge piece by piece, and BronzeBooty does not make that easy to confirm. The writing is convincing enough in most cases, but there are articles where the voice shifts toward the promotional and you wonder how much hands-on experience is behind the recommendation.
Safety advice from a hobbyist
Some of the content drifts into territory where the stakes are higher than picking a bronzer. BronzeBooty has pieces on treating sunburn and, notably, guidance on sunburn in babies. That is the part of the site that gives pause. A passion project written by an enthusiast is a fine place to learn how to make a tan last or how to avoid streaks on your legs. It is a less obvious place to take advice about a sunburned infant, where the sensible move is a doctor or a pediatric resource, not a tanning blog.
To be fair, plenty of the safety material is reasonable consumer-level information, and writing about sunburn at all shows BronzeBooty is not purely cheerleading for more colour. The how-to-make-a-tan-last pieces, the spray tan tips aimed at men, the looks at in-shower tanners and organic spray formulas all read like the work of someone genuinely interested in the subject. The breadth is the selling point. You can land on BronzeBooty curious about one method and find she has written about three others with similar depth.
Beyond the blog itself, BronzeBooty extends onto Pinterest, where it has built up more than 482 pins, and onto a YouTube channel built around tanning tips. For a visual subject like tanning, video and pinned imagery make sense, and an active presence on both tells you this is not an abandoned project. It also tells you how Laura prefers to reach people, leaning on social platforms more than on any formal infrastructure.
That informality carries over to how you reach the site. There is a contact page with a form, and the About page points you to the same form. No phone number, no address, which fits a solo blog with nothing to sell and no walk-in audience. A form is a perfectly normal contact route for this kind of personal site.
On third-party opinion, there is very little to go on. Dealspotr lists BronzeBooty with a single user rating and no aggregate score, and searches on Google, Trustpilot, Yelp, and the BBB turn up nothing. The site appears in search results mostly for its own articles, which is normal for a content blog but leaves you without any independent read on whether its product reviews and advice have earned trust over time. BronzeBooty is essentially asking to be taken on its own word, and for a site of this type that is not disqualifying, though it does put the burden on the reader.
The breadth here is genuine and Laura's enthusiasm comes through clearly, which makes BronzeBooty a decent first stop for casual tanning curiosity. But the one-person setup that gives the site its voice also means no editorial check, no track record you can verify from outside, and product reviews you have to take partly on faith. For making a tan last or comparing spray methods, that is a fair trade. The harder question is the safety content sitting in the same library under the same single byline, and whether a reader will know which pages to trust and which to cross-check elsewhere.
Business address
Bronze Booty
United States