A solid drugstore body wash with a bright citrus-peppermint scent, matcha-and-arnica brand story, and strong lather at a sub-$10 price. Best for normal to oily skin looking for an energizing morning shower experience. Not the pick for dry, sensitive, or fragrance-averse users — the sulfate base and essential oils will be too stripping.
Rise Body Wash
A solid drugstore body wash with a bright citrus-peppermint scent, matcha-and-arnica brand story, and strong lather at a sub-$10 price. Best for normal to oily skin looking for an energizing morning shower experience. Not the pick for dry, sensitive, or fragrance-averse users — the sulfate base and essential oils will be too stripping.
Score Breakdown
Where this product gains points and where it loses them — broken down across the four scoring pillars.
A competent energizing body wash at a strong drugstore price, but the sulfate base, fragrance load, and essential oils cap irritation and ingredient scores for dry or sensitive users.
Pros & Cons
- ✓Strong energizing citrus-peppermint scent
- ✓Rich generous lather from sulfate-betaine base
- ✓Great value at under $8 for 16 oz
- ✓Wide drugstore availability at Target, Walmart, Amazon
- ✓Cruelty-free and vegan
- ✓Distinctive athletic-brand identity in a generic category
- ✗Sulfate base can be stripping for dry skin
- ✗Fragrance and essential oils may irritate sensitive users
- ✗Matcha and arnica are brand story more than skin benefit
- ✗Not suitable for eczema or compromised skin barriers
- ✗No cumulative skin treatment benefit — it's just a cleanser
Full Review
Art of Sport has one of the more interesting brand origins in drugstore body care. When the company launched in 2018, Kobe Bryant was among the founding partners, and the brand's pitch was that elite athletes deserved better than the generic drugstore body washes and deodorants most people grab on autopilot — but those products should be accessible at mass retail, not locked behind a $30 prestige price. That origin story has given Art of Sport a distinctive identity in a category that tends to blur together on the Target shelf, and the Rise Body Wash is the brand's most recognizable morning-routine expression of that positioning.
Rise is the energizing citrus variant of the body wash lineup, and the scent is doing most of the heavy lifting in how the product is experienced. Squeeze out a palmful of clear gel, add water, and it foams into a rich, bright citrus-peppermint lather that smells unmistakably like a wake-up shower rather than a spa. Grapefruit and orange peel oils deliver the top note, peppermint oil adds a cooling sensation on the skin, and eucalyptus gives it a slightly sharper herbal edge. For people who start the day with a morning workout or just want a shower that feels like an event rather than a chore, the sensory experience is the product. It does what it promises.
Under the scent, the formulation is a reasonably standard drugstore body wash architecture. Sodium laureth sulfate is the primary surfactant, which is why it lathers generously and rinses cleanly — but also why it can feel stripping on dry or barrier-compromised skin. Cocamidopropyl betaine softens the sulfate slightly. Glycerin, panthenol, and aloe juice provide some token humectant support, and tocopheryl acetate adds vitamin E for a minor antioxidant claim. The matcha green tea extract and arnica are the brand's signature botanicals and tie into the athletic recovery story — matcha for antioxidant messaging, arnica for post-workout soreness storytelling. In honest terms, both are at concentrations and contact times too brief to deliver measurable skin benefits in a wash-off format, but they do contribute to the brand narrative and the overall identity of the product.
The brand-hype question needs to be handled carefully here. Art of Sport was genuinely interesting at launch because the Kobe Bryant involvement lent cultural credibility to a body care brand, and the positioning filled a real gap in the drugstore athletic category. The matcha-and-arnica story is charming without being ridiculous. But it's also important to keep expectations calibrated: this is a body wash, not a recovery treatment. It's not going to reduce muscle soreness or accelerate workout recovery in any meaningful physiological way. It's a well-scented, well-lathering, affordable daily cleanser with a consistent brand identity. The honest pitch is 'a better-than-average drugstore body wash with a genuinely energizing scent,' and at that pitch it delivers.
The formula's limitations are predictable for the category. Dry skin will find it stripping without a good follow-up lotion. Sensitive and reactive skin may find the fragrance load and essential oil content irritating — peppermint, citrus oils, and arnica are all common sensitizers, even though the concentrations in a wash-off product are low. Users with eczema or compromised skin barrier should look to cream-based, fragrance-free body washes instead. Fungal-acne-prone users should note that the oil content isn't ideal for their condition. This is not an everyone wash — it's specifically a normal-to-oily skin wash for people who enjoy fragranced personal care.
The value math is where this product actually shines. At around $7.99 for 16 ounces, it's priced in line with mass-market drugstore body washes while delivering a more distinctive sensory experience and a more considered ingredient story than most of its direct competitors. A bottle lasts most users four to six weeks with daily full-body use, which works out to a very reasonable per-shower cost. For users who were already buying a drugstore body wash and want to upgrade their morning sensory experience without spending prestige-brand money, this is a legitimate choice.
A note on the brand's trajectory: Art of Sport is still an emerging brand in the formal sense — it's been around since 2018, it doesn't have decades of independent validation, and its formulation sophistication is appropriate for drugstore pricing rather than clinical-tier scrutiny. The brand hasn't reinvented body care, and you shouldn't expect it to. What it has done is build a coherent identity in a category that usually doesn't bother, and deliver a wash that's genuinely pleasant to use at a price anyone can afford. For the specific job it's trying to do — replace your current drugstore body wash with something slightly more interesting — it earns its spot.
If you're a skincare enthusiast looking for a treatment-grade body wash, this is not the pick. Try a sulfate-free cream wash with ceramides or glycolic acid for a body routine that actually does something therapeutic. If you're a normal human being who wants a good shower and a bright morning scent at drugstore pricing, Art of Sport Rise is one of the more considered options in the category.
Formula
Key Ingredients
The hero actives that drive this product's performance.
| Ingredient | Function | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Matcha (Camellia Sinensis) Extract | Green tea polyphenols and EGCG provide antioxidant support in a wash-off format — meaningful even in a short contact time because athletic body washes see frequent daily use. In this formulation, matcha is the brand's signature hero because of its association with performance and recovery storytelling. | well-established |
| Arnica Extract | Traditionally used for post-exercise muscle soreness and bruising support, included here to align with the brand's athletic recovery positioning. Topical arnica has modest clinical evidence for perceived soreness relief, and in a wash-off body format it contributes more to the brand identity than to measurable recovery benefit. | emerging |
| Citrus + Eucalyptus + Peppermint Essential Oil Blend | Provides the energizing citrus-forward scent profile that defines the Rise variant. Peppermint adds a cooling sensation on lathering; grapefruit and orange peel oils deliver the bright citrus top note. The scent is the primary sensory signal here — this is not a fragrance-free wash. | traditional-use |
Full INCI List · pH 5.5
Water (Aqua), Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Cocamidopropyl Betaine, Sodium Chloride, Glycerin, Fragrance (Parfum), Citric Acid, Aloe Barbadensis Leaf Juice, Camellia Sinensis (Matcha) Leaf Extract, Arnica Montana Flower Extract, Eucalyptus Globulus Leaf Extract, Mentha Piperita (Peppermint) Oil, Citrus Grandis (Grapefruit) Peel Oil, Citrus Aurantium Dulcis (Orange) Peel Oil, Tocopheryl Acetate, Panthenol, Sodium Benzoate, Potassium Sorbate, Disodium EDTA, Tetrasodium EDTA
Product Flags
✗ Fragrance Free✓ Alcohol Free✗ Oil Free✓ Silicone Free✓ Paraben Free✗ Sulfate Free✓ Cruelty Free✓ Vegan✗ Fungal Acne Safe
Potential Irritants
fragrancepeppermint oilcitrus oilsarnica
Common Allergens
fragrancelimonenelinalool
Compatibility
Skin Match
Best For
Works For
Not Ideal For
Addresses These Conditions
Use With Caution
Avoid With
Routine Step
cleanser
Time of Day
AM & PM
Pregnancy Safe
Yes ✓
Layering Tips
Use in the shower on damp skin, lather, and rinse thoroughly. Follow with a body lotion or cream, especially on legs and arms where this wash can feel slightly stripping.
Results Timeline
Immediate refreshing clean and energizing scent. No cumulative skin benefits — this is a functional daily cleanser rather than a treatment product.
Pairs Well With
body-lotionbody-butterantiperspirant
Sample AM Routine
- Art of Sport Rise Body Wash
- Body lotion
- Deodorant
- Sunscreen if exposed skin
Sample PM Routine
- Art of Sport Rise Body Wash
- Body lotion or nothing
Evidence
Who Should Skip
- Sulfate base can be stripping for dry skin
- Fragrance and essential oils may irritate sensitive users
- Matcha and arnica are brand story more than skin benefit
- Not suitable for eczema or compromised skin barriers
Science & Expert Perspective
The Science
Body washes are functional cleansers, and the evidence base for this category is primarily surfactant chemistry and tolerance rather than active ingredient research. Sodium laureth sulfate is a well-characterized anionic surfactant with a long history of use in personal care; it produces rich lather and effective oil and debris removal but can disrupt barrier lipids with repeated daily exposure, especially on dry or sensitized skin. Pairing SLES with cocamidopropyl betaine, as this formula does, softens the surfactant profile and reduces irritation potential, though it does not eliminate it. Glycerin and panthenol add modest humectant and soothing support during wash time. The botanical actives — matcha, arnica, eucalyptus, peppermint — have their own evidence bases in leave-on contexts, but in a wash-off product with typical contact times of 30 to 90 seconds, meaningful cutaneous deposition of polyphenols or arnica constituents is minimal. Published research on rinse-off antioxidant delivery is limited; most topical antioxidant studies use leave-on serums or creams. The fragrance and essential oil load is relatively high for a body wash, and while wash-off exposure limits cumulative sensitization risk, individuals with known fragrance or Asteraceae-family (composite) plant allergies should still exercise caution. The pH of the finished product is approximately 5.5, which is within the skin-friendly range for a surfactant-based wash and helps reduce the disruptive impact of the SLES surfactant.
Dermatologist Perspective
Dermatologists generally consider sulfate-based body washes acceptable for daily use in patients with normal to oily skin but often recommend gentler cream-based or sulfate-free washes for patients with eczema, xerosis, or chronically dry skin. Board-certified dermatologists sometimes note that fragrance and essential oils, while enjoyable for most users, are among the most common causes of contact dermatitis in body care products and that patients with sensitive or reactive skin should default to unscented options. For Art of Sport specifically, the athletic positioning and sensory experience are appealing for otherwise healthy skin, but the product is not appropriate for patients with inflammatory skin conditions.
Guidance
Usage Guide
How to Use
Apply a quarter-sized amount to a damp loofah, washcloth, or directly to wet skin, lather generously, and work over the body. Pay extra attention to sweaty areas after workouts. Rinse thoroughly — the sulfate surfactant rinses cleanly and should not leave residue. For dry or winter skin, always follow with a body lotion or cream while the skin is still damp to lock in hydration. Avoid the face, the eye area, and mucous membranes. Not recommended for daily use on eczema-affected or chronically dry patches.
Value Assessment
At $7.99 for 16 oz, this body wash delivers strong drugstore value. The per-use cost is low, a bottle lasts four to six weeks with daily use, and the sensory experience is a clear step up from generic mass-market alternatives. There is only the one size, so no per-unit savings are available beyond retailer promotions. For users who appreciate the brand identity and scent profile, the value is excellent. For users who would prefer sulfate-free cream washes or fragrance-free options, the value is irrelevant — this isn't the right formula. Comparable energizing body washes from prestige brands cost three to four times as much without meaningfully better function, which is where Art of Sport earns its place in the category.
Who Should Buy
Normal, combination, and oily skin users looking for an energizing morning body wash with a distinctive citrus-peppermint scent at drugstore pricing. Also a good match for active people who enjoy a brisk sensory shower experience and want something more considered than generic grocery store body washes.
Who Should Skip
Users with dry, sensitive, or eczema-prone skin should choose a cream-based, fragrance-free body wash instead. Fragrance-averse users and anyone with known citrus or composite-family allergies should look elsewhere. Users looking for treatment-grade body cleansing with glycolic acid, salicylic acid, or ceramides won't find it here.
Ready to try Art of Sport Rise Body Wash?
Details
Details
Texture
Clear gel that lathers into a rich foam
Scent
Bright citrus-forward with grapefruit, orange, peppermint, and eucalyptus notes
Packaging
Plastic bottle with flip-top cap
Finish
non-greasy
What to Expect on First Use
Squeezes out as a clear gel that foams generously with water. The scent hits immediately — bright, citrusy, slightly cooling from the peppermint. Rinses cleanly without film. Most users feel clean and refreshed; drier skin can feel tight within a few minutes and will want a body lotion afterward.
How Long It Lasts
4-6 weeks with daily full-body shower use
Period After Opening
12 months
Best Season
spring summer
Certifications
cruelty-free
Background
The Why
Art of Sport was launched in 2018 by a team including Kobe Bryant as a founding partner, aimed at bringing athlete-grade performance skincare and body care to a drugstore price point. The line originally targeted male athletes but quickly grew into a unisex offering, with Rise as the energizing morning variant of the body wash lineup.
About Art of Sport Emerging Brand (2–5 years)
Art of Sport launched in 2018, co-founded by a team that included Kobe Bryant as an early backer and brand partner. Positioned as a performance-focused men's and unisex body care line, the brand sits in the drugstore athletic category and leans on its athlete identity rather than clinical heritage.
Brand founded: 2018 · Product launched: 2018
Myth vs. Reality
Myths & Misconceptions
Myth
Matcha in body wash delivers antioxidant protection to your skin.
Reality
In a wash-off product, contact time is too short for meaningful deposition of polyphenols. Matcha contributes to the brand story and scent profile more than to actual skin antioxidant delivery.
Myth
Essential oils make this more natural and skin-friendly.
Reality
Peppermint, citrus, and eucalyptus oils are common sensitizers and can be irritating for people with reactive skin. In this wash they're sensory features, not safety features.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this body wash good for post-workout showers?
Yes — the citrus and peppermint scent is bright and energizing, and the generous lather rinses away sweat and grime effectively. Dry skin users should follow with a body lotion afterward.
Does it contain sulfates?
Yes. The primary surfactant is sodium laureth sulfate, which provides the rich lather. If you prefer sulfate-free formulas, this is not the right pick.
Is the scent too strong?
The fragrance is noticeable and intentional — bright citrus with peppermint and eucalyptus. Most users find it pleasant and energizing; people sensitive to fragrance or citrus oils may find it overwhelming.
Can I use it on my face?
Not recommended. The sulfate surfactant base and essential oil fragrance are formulated for body skin, not the more delicate face. Use a proper facial cleanser instead.
Is it safe during pregnancy?
Body washes are generally considered safe during pregnancy. The essential oil content is mild and wash-off, but if you're concerned about citrus or peppermint exposure, check with your OB.
Community
Community Voices
Common Praise
"energizing morning scent"
"good lather"
"affordable at drugstore"
Common Complaints
"fragrance too strong for some"
"can be drying"
"scent fades quickly on skin"
Notable Endorsements
Target exclusive launch partnerathlete endorsements
Appears In
best drugstore body wash best energizing body wash best mens body wash best post workout body wash
Related Conditions
Related Ingredients
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This review reflects our independent analysis of publicly available ingredient data, manufacturer claims, and verified user reviews. We are reader-supported — Amazon links may earn us a commission at no cost to you. We do not accept paid placements; rankings are based solely on the evidence.