Business Standard

Fancy water bottles may change your life

Polly Mosendz tests several of the top offerings from the multibilli­ondollar reusable water bottle market and finds an existentia­l truth

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The baby pink Bkr water bottle I was carrying was covered in rubber spikes, not unlike an adorable mace.

It wasn’t particular­ly easy to drink out of, and it didn’t fit in cup holders. But when it came to social signaling, it felt as if I were suddenly armed with a powerful weapon. With it, I’d pushed my way into the club of chic spin class girls, who wore luxury spandex and inexplicab­ly didn’t sweat.

Bkr calls it the “spiked tutu” bottle and says its design was “inspired by warrior women crisscross­ing the globe in the name of fashion, slinking around London in trusty pink ballet flats, wearing them until they look like dirty Band-Aids.” The brand charges $58 for the 1-liter model, which blurs the line between actual hydration tool and frivolous accessory.

In an effort to stick to a New Year’s resolution (drink more water) and dabble in luxury selfcare, I tested a variety of water bottles, ranging from the least expensive, $20, to the most, $98. Some of the bottles I chose were among the best rated by Wirecutter, a reputable product review website, whereas others were “designer” bottles that didn’t make Wirecutter’s list. These bottles would replace the flimsy plastic bottle I’d refilled a million times.

Among my bottles was a 17ounce stainless-steel S’well, decorated to look like wood. It was beautiful, and the evening I brought it home, a relative immediatel­y tried to steal it. It sells for $35, which is $34 more than I’d usually spend on a water bottle. In fact, when I discovered my colleague had purchased a limitededi­tion S’well for more than $50, I thought he’d lost his mind. Then I watched everyone cluster around his bottle, compliment­ing his choice. Suddenly I was jealous. Of a water bottle. When I got my own, I found myself signaling to S’wellowning strangers with it.

In fact, the S’well circle is very wide. The brand is approved by Oprah Winfrey and took in revenue of more than $100 million in 2016. The bottles have found a home among lovable celebritie­s, including Kaley Cuoco and Julia Roberts. They’ve appeared on movie shoots and in Equinox gyms across the country.

The reusable water bottle market is expected to reach $10.4 billion by 2025, from an estimated $7.6 billion in 2016.

“The global market comprises a large number of players and, thus, is fragmented,” says a report from Transparen­cy Market Research released late last year. “The top five players within this market accounted for a meager 6% share of the overall industry in 2016.” That’s a lot of people making containers that serve the exact same purpose.

Industry leaders range from trendy to old-school: S’well, with its 220,000 Instagram followers,

The reusable water bottle market is expected to reach $10.4 billion by 2025, from an estimated $7.6 billion in 2016

sells bottles for $25 to $1,500 apiece. Tupperware Brands Corp. bottles cost $5 to $11. All perform the same functions: carrying water, not spilling, saving the environmen­t.

As a matter of functional­ity, S’well, Klean Kanteen ($37), Hydro Flask($40), and Bkr all keep things properly cold for almost 24 hours. (S’well will keep your coffee hot for an entire workday, too.) But I found myself drinking more water when I used a luxury water bottle, particular­ly the baby pink mace. I wanted to show off my hydration vessel and, in the process, actually stay really wellhydrat­ed. I was so delighted in my absurd water-bottleindu­ced superiorit­y, I easily consumed the recommende­d eight daily glasses. I also brought it just about everywhere — into every meeting, on every subway ride. I wanted people to ask me about my water bottle. Look, if you need something just to keep your water cold throughout the day, the $11 Tupperware model will do you right. The rest all have some degree of ridiculous­ness (I tested a $98 one with a gemstone pod in it for good energy; it was awful), but that’s their appeal. Buyers clearly want bottles that make hydration fun, even social. It works for them and, I’m not too proud to say, me.

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