These FIFA players know ball, that much we know, but this year, they have upped the style game too. The sport and fashion relationship has clocked plenty of mileage by now, but the 2026 FIFA World Cup proves itself just to be the grand moment where all the big names have come together.
With football already making headlines from the players and the designer bags they are carrying into the tournament, the off-pitch wardrobe has become one of the biggest style subplots of the season. Over in Spain’s camp, Loewe is dressing the national teams away from the pitch, bringing the house’s leather goods and tailoring into the World Cup stylescape. Croatia has Mackage on travel duty, with the outerwear label creating a World Cup capsule for the team that includes a debut sneaker.
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The tournament has also made room for a sharper take on tailoring, with Uruguay in Gabriela Hearst uniforms crafted from Uruguayan merino wool and the U.S. men’s team stepping out in Boss. Levi’s has also joined the conversation with its U.S. Football collection, bringing denim into the fan wardrobe while still making the pieces feel extremely wearable for the casual day-to-day.


Nike’s football capsules have been another major talking point, with Jacquemus taking on France and Peaceminusone bringing G-Dragon’s universe to South Korea. Add his daisy motifs and Cho Gi-Seok’s campaign visuals, and the whole drop suddenly becomes one of the tournament’s most hypnotic fashion moments. Meanwhile, Adidas’s Mexico collection with Willy Chavarria brings the designer’s oversized shapes into a national-pride moment, while Puma’s Salehe Bembury pieces bring football dressing closer to streetwear.
From team arrival looks to designer-led capsules, the 2026 FIFA World Cup is shaping up to be one of football’s most stylish tournaments yet. See below for some of the best fashion collaborations and team wardrobes spotted so far.

1 / 9
Loewe x Spain
Loewe and Spain feel like an obvious match in the best way. Beginning with the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the Madrid house is dressing La Roja off the pitch, bringing its travel wardrobe into football’s biggest summer.

2 / 9
Nike x Peaceminusone
Nike x Peaceminusone is easily one of the buzziest drops here, with G-Dragon’s label reworking South Korea’s KFA wardrobe through its daisy-marked universe. With Cho Gi-Seok behind the campaign visuals, the capsule gets the right charge to match the hype.

3 / 9
Boss x USMNT
The U.S. men’s team gets suited up by Boss for its off-field World Cup wardrobe. It is a clean move for the host nation, giving the squad a sharper look for travel and official appearances.

4 / 9
Levi’s x US Football
Levi’s gives U.S. Soccer the most natural fit in the lineup: denim. With the crest worked into classic pieces, the collection feels like something that already belongs in an American wardrobe.

5 / 9
Adidas x Willy Chavarria
Willy Chavarria’s Mexico collection with Adidas feels especially charged this World Cup season. The oversized shapes, deep colours and national-team link make it one of the strongest designer-led football capsules in the lineup.

6 / 9
Gabriela Hearst x Uruguay
Gabriela Hearst’s Uruguay uniforms come with a personal touch, crafted from Uruguayan merino wool for La Celeste. It is one of the more meaningful designer links in the lineup, with the country’s own materials worked into the team’s off-pitch look.

7 / 9
Puma x Salehe Bembury
Salehe Bembury’s Puma collection is where the World Cup wardrobe gets properly loud. Designed across goalkeeper kits and Trvl Wear for the brand’s qualified national federations, the project brings his swirls and colour sense into full football mode, from Portugal’s bright pink kit to Austria’s sky-blue florals.

8 / 9
Mackage x Croatia
Croatia’s off-field wardrobe gets a cold-weather upgrade with Mackage. The outerwear label created a World Cup capsule for the team, complete with travel pieces and its first sneaker.

9 / 9
Nike x Jacquemus
Jacquemus takes France into one of the most fashion-facing Nike capsules of the tournament. It has the clean, slightly cheeky French touch you would expect from the label, now filtered through the national team wardrobe.