Once upon a bathroom shelf, bar soap was just… there. Practical, plain, and low-key judgmental when it slipped out of your hand mid-shower. Fast-forward to 2025, and suddenly this “grandma staple” has gone from boring necessity to bougie beauty flex.

Yes, you read that right. The humble soap bar is now sitting pretty next to Chanel perfumes, Glossier cleansers, and Loewe candles, carrying itself like the Beyoncé of your bathroom counter.

Bar Soap
Instagram

Why the Glow-Up?

Blame it on Gen Z’s eco-friendly obsession or our collective desire to make everything look chic for TikTok. Dermatologists and beauty insiders say it’s nostalgia meets sustainability. A soap bar feels artisanal, looks like decor, and (bonus!) cuts down on plastic waste. In short, it’s skincare with conscience.

Dove and Dial may have held it down for decades, but in 2025, everyone from luxury houses to indie brands has their own “it” bar. Some are so pretty you’ll feel bad using them (RIP to that Loewe soap that melts in two showers), while others are everyday staples with glow-boosting ingredients like shea butter, essential oils, and exfoliating clays.

Bar Soap
Instagram

Bar soap has entered the chat as both slow beauty ritual and status symbol. It’s giving indulgence, it’s giving eco-friendly, it’s giving “soft life but sustainable.”

Bar Soaps are More Than Just Hygiene

Think about it: body wash feels practical. Bar soap? It feels fleeting, precious, and a little bit extra — like self-care you can hold. Beauty pros say that’s exactly the point. Today’s shower isn’t just a rinse; it’s a ritual. And nothing says ritual like a bar of soap that makes you feel like you’re at a spa, even when NEPA takes light mid-shower.

Bar soap never really left, but its rebrand is unmatched. What used to be “that thing your grandma swore by” is now the hottest accessory on your bathroom sink. Cheap or luxe, functional or collectible, it’s proof that self-care doesn’t have to be complicated. Sometimes, indulgence is just one lather away.

Author

Daniel Usidamen is Fashion Editor & Chief Critic at La Mode Magazine. Known for his sharp takes and unapologetic voice, he writes about runway moments, rising African designers, and the cultural pulse of fashion on the continent. Expect insight, a little sass, and zero filter.

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