Conidia of Beauveria bassiana and Metarhizium spp. smeared on glass slides were assayed for their responses to irradiation with weighted 312-nm UV-B and 365-nm UV-A at gradient doses of 0.005–1.1 and 1.0–18.0 J cm−2, respectively. All inverted, sigmoid dose–survival trends showed good fit to a survival model (r 2 ≥ 0.97), yielding respective UV-B LD50s of 0.23–0.59 and 0.05–0.65 J cm−2 for 24 B. bassiana and 36 Metarhizium isolates, and UV-A LD50s of 2.78–10.46 J cm−2 for 24 Metarhizium isolates. Myzus persicae apterae on detached leaves were sprayed with a concentrated spore suspension of B. bassiana or M. anisopliae, followed by exposure to the UV-B doses to cause 10–90% viability losses. These doses caused aphid mortality reductions as expected but affected neither spray-to-death period nor fungal growth on cadavers. The results highlight the merits of using UV-tolerant candidates and photoprotection measures in fungal formulations for pest control.