Underdays, the direct-to-consumer underwear brand known for its considered basics, has launched a summer collection built around a quiet innovation: probiotic fabric technology. The new line incorporates a microbiome-friendly finish designed to support the skin’s natural bacterial balance rather than strip it away.
The concept sits at the intersection of two accelerating consumer trends — the rise of skinification in adjacent categories and a growing skepticism toward harsh detergents and synthetic blends. Underdays is betting that the same consumer who double-cleanses and layers serums will demand similar consideration from the fabrics touching her skin for twelve hours a day.
Underdays is not the first brand to explore probiotic textiles, but the category remains nascent. Most innovations have focused on performance fabrics for sportswear; bringing the technology into everyday intimates signals a maturation of the market. If the consumer responds, the implications extend beyond underwear into every layer of the wardrobe.
The collection includes briefs, bikinis, and bralettes in muted earth tones — taupe, clay, charcoal — with a clean, undarted silhouette that prioritizes comfort over ornament. There is no branding, no elasticized logo band, no hardware. The proposition is entirely interior: what the fabric does, not what it says.
The probiotic finish, applied at the fiber level rather than as a topical spray, is engineered to survive multiple wash cycles. It works by feeding beneficial microbes that crowd out odor-causing bacteria, a mechanism borrowed from the world of high-end activewear but applied here to everyday cotton-modal blends.


