hand washing pixabay

Less need to leave home for most Brits has meant a more casual approach to using the likes of deodorant

Brits are washing their hands less often than last year. At least, that’s what the data suggests. Liquid soap’s value has fallen by 13.1%, while bar soap is down by 16.1%. However, NielsenIQ analyst Iulia Preda attributes the declines not to lax personal hygiene but the annualising of strong growth from 2020 amid panic-buying and stockpiling.

For big soap brands that have slumped – including Dove, Carex and Imperial Leather – “the most common factor has been a drop in unit demand” says Preda. Plus, retailers have given smaller suppliers more shelf space.

 

Declines in other sectors are more straightforward to explain. Less need to leave home for most Brits has meant a more casual approach to using the likes of deodorant – down by £37.8m – and shower gel, which has shed £9.1m.

Nevertheless, in spite of the downward trend, some bathroom brands have grown. They were mainly ones with strong wellness and self-care messaging, says Preda. She points to Radox, which rebranded in January and kicked off its ‘Life’s better with bubbles’ push. It’s shifted an extra 2.1 million packs.

Meanwhile, female skincare has seen 8.4 million packs go through tills. But a 7.5% rise in average price has kept the sector in the black.

Top launch 2021

Lynx revamp | Unilever

Lynx recharge

Once aimed squarely at libidinous teenage boys, Lynx now wants to appeal to younger people in a way that “doesn’t rely on gender stereotypes”. Hence the brand’s revamp in May, with new-look packaging and reformulation of all lines to help deliver up to 72 hours of “enhanced freshness” and “superior fragrance”. Plus, there was the launch of Lynx Sport Recharge, which includes body spray and shower gel made with plant-based prebiotics (rsps: £2.84 to £4.50).

The Grocer’s Top Products Survey 2021: who’s up, who’s down – and our overview of the key trends