Daily Moisturizing Body Wash
Dry Skin Daily Driver
Pros & cons.
- +Triple-oat system provides clinically backed moisturizing benefits during cleansing
- +Glycerin-rich formula deposits meaningful hydration even as a rinse-off product
- +National Eczema Association Seal of Acceptance validates gentle formulation claims
- +Exceptional value at under ten dollars for 18 oz with larger sizes available
- +Light scent disappears quickly and doesn't interfere with other products
- +Rinses clean without post-shower tightness or greasy residue
- +Available in multiple sizes including eco-friendly refill pouches
- +Backed by 80 years of Aveeno's oat science research heritage
- −Contains Sodium Laureth Sulfate despite gentle-skin marketing positioning
- −Fragrance inclusion limits suitability for highly reactive or allergy-prone skin
- −Thinner consistency than many users expect from a moisturizing body wash
- −Some long-time users report the reformulated version is less hydrating than the original
- −Minimal lather may feel inadequate for those accustomed to rich foaming washes
The full review.
In 1945, Albert and Sidney Musher walked into a collaboration with the Mayo Clinic carrying a simple hypothesis: that finely milled oats could do more for skin than centuries of folk wisdom suggested. Eighty years later, Aveeno’s Daily Moisturizing Body Wash is the quiet inheritor of that bet — a product so unassuming in its white bottle that you might mistake it for something boring. It is not boring. It is, however, deeply practical, which in the world of body care might actually be more revolutionary than another coconut-scented foam promising to transport you to Bali.
The formula centers on what Aveeno calls its triple-oat system: colloidal oat kernel flour, oat kernel oil, and oat kernel extract, each pulling different weight. The flour acts as an FDA-recognized skin protectant, depositing beta-glucans that form a breathable moisture-locking film. The oil replenishes lipids that surfactants inevitably strip. And the extract delivers avenanthramides — polyphenolic compounds unique to oats that dial down inflammation and itch at the cellular level. It’s a thoughtful layering of the same plant’s different fractions, each addressing a distinct mechanism of post-shower dryness.
Glycerin sits second on the INCI list, which in a rinse-off product is meaningful. Most body washes treat glycerin as a supporting player, but here it’s doing heavy lifting as a humectant that pulls water into the skin during the brief window when your pores are open and your bathroom is humid. The fact that this formula bothers to load up on glycerin in a product you’re about to wash off tells you something about the formulation intent.
The surfactant system is where pragmatism meets compromise. Cocamidopropyl betaine leads — a mild amphoteric cleanser that’s become the gold standard for gentle formulas. But sodium laureth sulfate follows, and while SLES is considerably gentler than its notorious cousin SLS, its presence here is worth noting. It’s the ingredient that gives the wash enough cleaning power for everyday grime, body oil, and light sunscreen residue. If you’re strictly sulfate-avoidant, this isn’t your product. If you’re looking for effective cleansing that doesn’t leave your skin staging a drought protest, the trade-off is reasonable.
Texture
Texture-wise, expect a lightweight, slightly pearlescent gel that doesn’t produce the voluminous lather of a conventional body wash. This surprises some first-time users who associate foam volume with cleaning efficacy — a myth the beauty industry has spent decades profiting from. The lather is there, just restrained, and the wash rinses clean without that squeaky tightness that signals your skin barrier just got mugged.
Scent
The scent deserves mention because it occupies a rare sweet spot: present enough to make the shower experience pleasant, subtle enough to vanish within minutes of toweling off. It’s a clean, oat-forward note with the faintest floral whisper — the olfactory equivalent of a polite nod rather than a bear hug. That said, it is fragrance, listed right there on the label, and for the most reactive skin types, any fragrance is a calculated risk.
Common Praise
Performance is where this body wash earns its 30,000-plus positive ratings. The immediate difference is felt the moment you step out of the shower: skin doesn’t feel tight, doesn’t itch, doesn’t develop that ashy dullness by mid-morning. Over weeks of daily use, dry patches soften, flakiness diminishes, and the overall texture of your skin improves in a way that feels cumulative rather than dramatic. This isn’t a product that wows you on day one — it’s a product whose absence you notice when you switch to something else.
Common Complaints
The honest limitations are straightforward. The fragrance and SLES exclude it from the truly sensitive-skin-safe category that Aveeno’s marketing sometimes implies. The consistency is thinner than some users prefer — if you want a rich, creamy body wash experience, this will feel insubstantial. And some long-time users report that a reformulation somewhere along the way made the product less hydrating than the version they originally fell in love with, a complaint common enough to take seriously even if individual experiences vary.
Value
Value is arguably this product’s strongest suit. At roughly ten dollars for 18 ounces — with 33-ounce value sizes regularly available — you’re getting a clinically-backed oat formulation at drugstore prices. The cost per shower works out to something negligible, and the larger sizes push the value even further. Compared to specialty body washes charging three or four times as much for similar or simpler formulations, this is the kind of product that makes you wonder what you’re actually paying for elsewhere.
Works for
The National Eczema Association Seal of Acceptance adds institutional credibility beyond marketing claims. This isn’t a body wash that calls itself gentle because gentle sounds nice — it’s been evaluated against criteria established by dermatologists specifically for eczema-prone skin.
Best for
Is it perfect? No. The ideal version of this product would drop the fragrance and swap SLES for a milder secondary surfactant, and Aveeno knows this — that’s essentially what their Skin Relief Body Wash is. But for the vast majority of dry-skinned humans who want an affordable, effective, pleasant daily body wash that doesn’t require a dermatology degree to understand, this is an excellent default choice. It’s the product equivalent of a reliable friend who always shows up, never makes the evening about themselves, and somehow leaves things a little better than they found them.
Ingredient analysis.
Full INCI list
Water, Glycerin, Cocamidopropyl Betaine, Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Avena Sativa (Oat) Kernel Flour, Avena Sativa (Oat) Kernel Oil, Avena Sativa (Oat) Kernel Extract, Guar Hydroxypropyltrimonium Chloride, Polyquaternium-10, Tetrasodium EDTA, Sodium Benzoate, Citric Acid, Sodium Hydroxide, Fragrance
Skin match.
The science.
The Science
Colloidal oatmeal — Avena sativa kernel flour — is the formula's cornerstone. The FDA has recognized it as a skin protectant since 2003. A 2016 study in the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology shows colloidal oatmeal improves skin barrier function via multiple mechanisms: it increases expression of genes for epidermal differentiation and tight junction formation, provides pH-buffering capacity, and deposits barrier-reinforcing lipids. This multi-pathway approach works well in a body wash where brief contact time limits single-mechanism ingredients.
Avenanthramides in the oat kernel extract component have extensive anti-inflammatory research. A 2015 study in the Archives of Dermatological Research shows avenanthramides inhibit nuclear factor kappa-B (NF-κB) activation and reduce pro-inflammatory cytokines and histamine release. These mechanisms reduce the itch and irritation dry-skinned individuals feel after showering.
Aveeno's prebiotic oat formulation also supports the microbiome. A 2021 study in Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dermatology found prebiotic colloidal oat supports beneficial commensal bacteria, specifically Staphylococcus epidermidis, and increases lactic acid production to maintain skin's acidic pH. This action goes beyond simple moisturization; the formula promotes conditions for healthy skin flora to thrive.
Glycerin, the second-listed ingredient, is a highly validated humectant. It improves skin hydration, barrier function, and mechanical properties even in rinse-off formulations with limited contact time.
References
- Colloidal Oatmeal (Avena Sativa) Improves Skin Barrier Through Multi-Therapy Activity — Journal of Drugs in Dermatology (2016)
- Anti-inflammatory activities of colloidal oatmeal (Avena sativa) contribute to the effectiveness of oats in treatment of itch associated with dry, irritated skin — Archives of Dermatological Research (2015)
- Prebiotic Colloidal Oat Supports the Growth of Cutaneous Commensal Bacteria Including S. epidermidis and Enhances the Production of Lactic Acid — Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dermatology (2021)
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists often recommend Aveeno's oat-based body washes as first-line options for patients with dry, itchy, or eczema-prone skin needing a daily cleanser that won't worsen their condition. Board-certified dermatologists note the colloidal oatmeal in this formula is one of the few over-the-counter ingredients with FDA skin protectant status, providing regulatory validation rare in the body wash category. The triple-oat approach — combining flour, oil, and extract — works better than single-oat formulations because it addresses multiple skin barrier dysfunction aspects at once. Dermatologists typically advise patients to apply moisturizer within three minutes of patting dry to maximize the hydration this wash deposits.
Where it fits in your routine.
Apply a large amount to wet skin in the shower or bath. Massage the body gently with hands or a soft washcloth. Avoid harsh loofahs, as they damage the skin barrier this wash protects. Let the formula sit on skin for 30-60 seconds so the oat ingredients deposit a protective film. Rinse well with lukewarm water; hot water strips moisture from any body wash. Pat skin mostly dry and apply moisturizer while skin is still slightly damp to seal in hydration.
At $9.99 for 18 fl oz, this is a top cost-effective, clinically-backed body wash. The 33 fl oz value size (usually $13-15) lowers the per-ounce cost, while the new refill pouch reduces packaging waste. This product has the National Eczema Association seal and uses Aveeno's 80-year oat research legacy; the price-to-quality ratio is excellent. Specialty body washes with simpler formulations and less clinical evidence cost two to three times more. The price reflects proven ingredients, not brand hype.
This works for dry, normal, or mildly sensitive skin needing an affordable daily body wash that moisturizes. It suits people with post-shower tightness, seasonal dryness, or mild eczema symptoms caused by conventional body washes.
People with severe fragrance sensitivities or contact allergies should use Aveeno's fragrance-free Skin Relief Body Wash. Those avoiding sulfates must look elsewhere. This minimal-foam formula may feel unsatisfying if you want a thick lather.
Product details.
This lightweight, slightly pearlescent gel makes a gentle, low-foam lather. It is more fluid and easier to spread than thicker, creamier body washes.
Subtle, clean oat scent with light floral notes. It is noticeable during use but fades fast after rinsing and does not compete with your moisturizer or fragrance.
Standard plastic squeeze bottle with a flip-top cap. It works but is unremarkable. The 33 oz value size and refill pouch offer better value and sustainability.
Skin feels less tight and dry after showering from the first use compared to conventional body washes. No adjustment period is needed. The lather is gentler and has less volume than most drugstore body washes; users may need one or two showers to adjust.
2-3 months with daily full-body use (18 oz size)
12 months
All Year
The backstory.
Born from Aveeno's eight-decade relationship with oat science that began at the Mayo Clinic in 1945, this body wash extends the brand's Daily Moisturizing franchise into the shower. It was developed to address the common complaint that body washes strip the very moisture that the follow-up lotion tries to replace — essentially designed to stop the problem before it starts.
About Aveeno
Legacy Brand (20+ years)Aveeno launched in 1945 with the Mayo Clinic and has dermatologist recommendations for over 70 years. Clinical research supports its oat-based formulations, and the brand has multiple National Eczema Association Seals of Acceptance.
Common myths.
Soap-free body washes don't clean as effectively as traditional soap
This formula uses cocamidopropyl betaine and sodium laureth sulfate as its surfactant system. These surfactants remove dirt and oil more gently than traditional soap. The "soap-free" designation means it lacks harsh saponified fats, not that it lacks cleaning power.
The moisturizing effect is a slippery residue that rinses off.
Colloidal oatmeal is an FDA-recognized skin protectant. It deposits beta-glucans and lipids onto skin to form a protective film. Studies show measurable improvements in skin hydration even with rinse-off oat formulations.
FAQ.
Is Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Body Wash good for eczema?
This body wash has the National Eczema Association Seal of Acceptance. Clinical evidence shows its colloidal oatmeal formula works on eczema-prone skin. Because it contains fragrance, people with severe eczema flares may prefer Aveeno's fragrance-free Skin Relief Body Wash.
Does Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Body Wash contain sulfates?
Yes, it uses Sodium Laureth Sulfate (SLES) as a secondary surfactant. SLES is milder than SLS, but note this if you avoid all sulfates. The primary surfactant, cocamidopropyl betaine, is a gentler amphoteric cleanser.
Can you use Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Body Wash on your face?
The formula is gentle enough for sensitive body skin, but it is a body wash. The surfactant system and fragrance make it less ideal for facial skin, which is thinner and more reactive. Use a dedicated facial cleanser for your face.
Is Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Body Wash good for sensitive skin?
The colloidal oatmeal and soap-free formula make this a solid option for mildly sensitive skin. But fragrance and SLES mean people with highly reactive or allergy-prone skin should patch test first or use the fragrance-free Skin Relief version.
How is Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Body Wash different from the Skin Relief version?
This Daily Moisturizing formula hydrates normal-to-dry skin and has a light fragrance. The Skin Relief version is fragrance-free, targets itchy and extra-dry skin, and uses a chamomile-oat blend to soothe skin.
Does Aveeno body wash leave a residue?
The oat-based formula leaves a light film of beta-glucans and lipids on skin. This layer locks in moisture rather than leaving a soapy residue. Most users report skin feels clean and soft without a greasy or filmy sensation after rinsing.
What sizes does Aveeno Daily Moisturizing Body Wash come in?
It comes in several sizes: 2 fl oz (travel), 12 fl oz, 18 fl oz (standard), 33 fl oz (value size), and a refill pouch. The larger sizes have a better per-ounce value.
What the community says.
"Leaves skin feeling soft and moisturized without residue"
"Gentle enough for daily use on sensitive skin"
"Pleasant light scent that doesn't linger"
"Doesn't cause post-shower tightness or dryness"
"Great value for the amount of product"
"Formula change — some users feel the reformulated version isn't as hydrating as the original"
"Contains sulfates and fragrance despite gentle marketing"
"Thin consistency — some prefer a thicker, creamier body wash"
"Lather is minimal compared to conventional body washes"