Industry TrendsFounders4 min read11 April 2026

Body Care Is the Most Underbuilt Category in Beauty Right Now

Body care is growing faster than any other beauty category, and the competitive landscape is still thin. Here is the commercial opportunity.

SL
Sophie Lansbury

Beauty 2.0 Founder - 20 years in the beauty industry

The brands moving into body care now, with real formulations rather than rebadged lotions, are building the next generation of beauty businesses.

Key takeaway

In brief
Body care is the fastest-growing beauty category of 2026. Demand is outpacing the number of credible brands filling it. Here is why that is an opening.
Who this is for
Founders
Main takeaway
The brands moving into body care now, with real formulations rather than rebadged lotions, are building the next generation of beauty businesses.
What to do next
Map your category against body care demand. Is there a credible line extension that treats body as seriously as face?

For years, body care was the boring part of a beauty brand. A moisturiser. Maybe a body wash. Sometimes a scrub. The real investment went into the face range.

That assumption is now out of date.

Body care is the fastest-growing category in beauty, and the gap between consumer expectations and what brands are actually shipping has become a genuine whitespace opportunity. The brands moving into it now are capturing outsized growth. The brands waiting to see what happens are falling behind.

What the data actually shows

Search volume for "body care routine" has grown more than 300% over two years. Sol de Janeiro became a billion-dollar brand primarily through body care. Nécessaire, Soft Services, Ouai Body, and Naturium Body are all scaling fast, and none of them existed in their current form five years ago.

Meanwhile, category leaders like Aveeno, Dove, and Nivea have barely evolved. The body care aisle in most retailers looks the same as it did in 2015.

That mismatch, between rapidly rising demand and a slow-moving incumbent set, is the definition of a whitespace.

Why it is happening now

Three shifts have converged.

First, consumer sophistication. The skincare education wave of the last decade, retinoids, acids, peptides, SPF, eventually had to reach the rest of the body. Consumers who spend £60 on a facial serum are no longer content with a £4 body lotion full of mineral oil.

Second, the TikTok effect. Short-form video made body care visible. Legs, arms, décolleté, and shoulders get more camera time on social feeds than ever before, and consumers have started treating those areas as extensions of their skincare routine.

Third, category innovation. Brands are finally formulating body products with the same actives as facial skincare. Body serums with niacinamide. Body SPF that does not feel like suntan lotion. Body retinol. Scalp care treated as skincare rather than hair care.

What consumers want from body care now

They want efficacy. Vague "softens and moisturises" claims do not land. Consumers want to know what the ingredients do.

They want texture and sensory quality. Body care is increasingly purchased on how it feels and smells as much as how it performs. Fragrance layering with body care has become a cultural phenomenon in itself.

They want routine integration. Body care products that work with existing facial routines, morning and evening, are replacing the "one tube of lotion" model.

And they want premium positioning without luxury prices. The sweet spot is £25 to £45 for a hero body product. Higher than drugstore, lower than Augustinus Bader. Most successful new body brands sit in this range.

What this means for brand strategy

If you have a facial skincare range, the question is whether your positioning and formulation philosophy can credibly extend to body. If it can, a body line is probably the single highest-return category extension available to you right now.

If you have a body care range already, the question is whether it reads as a credible 2026 product or a legacy product. Most do not.

If you are starting from scratch, body care is one of the few beauty categories where you can enter at premium prices, with a differentiated point of view, without competing head-to-head with conglomerate brands. The competitive set is still thin enough to build a brand inside.

The traps to avoid

Do not rebadge your face products. Consumers see through it. A body product needs to be formulated for body skin, at body application volumes, with appropriate texture and spreadability.

Do not compete on fragrance alone. Sol de Janeiro has that territory locked, and the imitators are already crowded. Fragrance can be part of the proposition but it cannot be all of it.

Do not underprice. Consumers are primed to expect premium body care. Launching at drugstore prices signals a drugstore product.

Do not skip education. Body care still has a consumer education problem. Most people do not know what body serum is, why they would use body retinol, or how to build a body routine. The brands that teach are the brands that win the category.

The bigger picture

Body care used to be the afterthought of a beauty range. In 2026, it is the fastest way for a beauty brand to compound growth.

The indie brands that understood this early, Sol de Janeiro, Nécessaire, Soft Services, built category-defining businesses in under five years. The ones that did not are now scrambling for share in a market that has already begun to consolidate.

If you are a founder looking at where to place your next bet, body care is the category most likely to reward a disciplined, well-formulated, well-positioned entry. The whitespace is still there. It will not be for much longer.

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SL

Sophie Lansbury

Founder of Beauty 2.0. Nearly 20 years in beauty — from counter to boardroom, indie launches to global houses. Writes about the operational reality of growing beauty brands.

About Sophie

Consumers are extending their facial skincare standards below the neck. Most brands have not caught up.

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