The Menswear Trends Shaping 2026

Menswear in 2026 is shaping up to be a year defined by intention. More texture, more nuance, more experimentation, and above all, more personality. The industry has been steadily moving toward a form of post-minimal-minimalism for a while, but 2026 is when that shift becomes impossible to ignore.
This is set to be the year of refined choices: simplicity over spectacle, craft in hand with quietness, and silhouettes that feel considered.
Here’s what’s coming.

01. Maximum Layering
Layering has long been a mainstay styling tool in menswear, but in 2026 the trick can become the statement in itself — combinations that move beyond the typical tee-sweater-coat formula and into multi-piece styling where each layer adds not just warmth but texture, proportion, and contrast.
From light gilets over technical shirting to cropped knits over sleek base layers, and oversized outerwear draped over both, this trend is about a form of controlled clothing abundance. The approach is architectural, and with brands designing pieces specifically meant to be seen, not hidden, layering can become the core of the outfit rather than a simple necessity.

02. Going Hell For Leather
Leather has been breaking out of its jacket-centric lane in 2025 and become a fabric that touches almost every category, which is likely going to go into overdrive in the new year considering the +199% increase in demand on Lyst during Q3 alone. Leather overshirts, leather trousers, leather tailoring, leather bags, and even leather hoodies and hybrid technical pieces are all on offer from some of menswear's most exciting brands. The look isn’t restricted to your typical rockstar or biker; it’s refined, tonal, inviting.
Soft, pliable finishes replace stiff leathers, allowing the material to move beyond outerwear and into everyday dressing. Expect monochrome leather outfits (in bright orange if Timothée Chalamet is to be followed), mixed-finish pairings (matte with high-shine), and subtle colors expanding beyond black and brown.

03. Shoe Shrinkage
Footwear continues its shrinkification in 2026. Chunky soles had a long reign, but the pendulum has swung sharply in the opposite direction. Ultra-low-profile sneakers and shoes have been solidly setting the tone, from razor-thin outsoles to slipper-adjacent moccasins, pared-back running silhouettes, and minimal loafers.
The look perfectly balances the juxtaposition of loose, longer trousers with a renewed focus on layering above the waist. These simpler shoes bring a touch of ease to everyday outfits and offer a less bulky foundation for the increasingly built-out proportions happening up top.

04. It's All Yellow
Yellow has potential to be a key color story for 2026, with designers embracing its full spectrum. From deep ochre and turmeric to paler citrine and buttercream, yellow takes on a versatility most people don’t expect. It pairs well with seasonal neutrals like olive, charcoal, chocolate, and stone, and brings vibrancy to winter wardrobes without tipping into neon or caution-sign brightness.
Yellow accessories are a good gateway for the color-curious, while outerwear and knitwear allow for those of a bolder disposition. It’s optimistic, grounding, and striking.

05. Top-Tier Textures
Texture becomes the standout visual language of the upcoming year, with shearling, ribbed knits, bouclé, brushed wool, suede, and heavily slubbed cotton all puzzle-piecing together with textural triumph. Pieces shouldn’t just look interesting, but feel interesting. This texture plays well with the burgeoning layering trend, each bringing a new element of textile dimensionality.

Key Takeaways
More layers, more texture, and more material experimentation, but not anything that feels overwhelming: 2026 is positioned to be a year defined by craft, tactility, and intention, where wardrobes and outfits are built piece by piece with clarity and purpose. Slimmer shoes, expanded leather categories, and an unexpectedly versatile color palette will be the driving forces behind encouraging men not just to get dressed following a rhythm, but to compose their own look.