The Best Jean Brands Will Lead You Straight to Denim Nirvana

From the mall brand stalwarts to the small-batch Japanese purists, these are the names to know.
27 Best Jean Brands 2023 TopNotch Denim From Levi's Acne Studios Kapital and More
Collage: Gabe Conte

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On your hunt to find the best denim, you'd be wise to start by getting familiar with the best jean brands, for a few reasons. For one, the best jean brands don't just make copy-and-paste takes on the same five-pocket dungaree—they play with fit, shape, details, fabric, and more. For another, great denim brands have personalities all their own. Maybe they get deep in the weeds on craftsmanship, or source rare denim (it exists!), or bring runway brilliance to the blue collar world of jeans. Maybe they just make an undeniably good pair of jeans at a great price, or a pair in your hard-to-find size.


The Best Jeans Hit List


Point is, scratch the surface and you find an ocean of indigo. We're here to help you set sail on this personal journey, so we've put together this guide to the best jean brands in the hope that you'll find the right pair—let's be honest, pairs—to hold down your fits. Whether you're wearing them with a plain white T-shirt and blue jeans, trying a daring double denim situation, or something even wilder, it's impossible to look bad when you've got a well-fitting pair of jeans in your rotation. And you can do just that, taking into account the best jeans on a budget, your body type, the silhouette and styles you want, and more.

So while we can’t be there in person to walk the store aisles (or scroll the screens) and help you pick out your new favorite pair of jeans, here are all the men's jeans brands that will steer you in the right direction.

How to Buy a Quality Pair of Jeans

1. Know a brand's strengths: You can break down the jeans world into two halves: brands that specialize in jeans, and brands that make jeans as part of a larger offering. The specialists tend to be unassailable, and they exist at all ends of the price spectrum, from Levi's and Lee to indie denim labels like 3sixteen. Andrew Chen, owner and founder of New York-based 3sixteen, explains one benefit of denim-focused brands: a relentless devotion to making better jeans. "Companies that make the same jeans year-in and year-out are always making tweaks—sometimes imperceptible—to improve the product.” On the flip side, a mall brand lets you try pairs on with ease (and no shipping fees). And a fashion-forward brand can add a new edge to your closet.

2. Consider the denim's quality: The long-term quality of a pair of jeans mostly comes down to the fabric and the stitching. Jeans from chain stores—whether that's Levi's or Madewell—tend to be made from mid-weight denim (generally “12 oz.” denim, calculated as weight-per-yard of fabric). Speciality denim retailers tend to start there and carry heavier artisanal selvedge denim, probably woven in Japan, the last bastion of high-end raw denim manufacturing. Heavier denim is meant to last longer (or so the theory goes), but isn't necessarily better, despite what some hardcore denimheads might say. Lighter denim (9-to-11oz.) is nice in the summer, but also more delicate.

3. Explore the brand's fits: Jean fits, like snowflakes and Haribo candy, come in a mind-melting array of seemingly-minute variations: you've gotta consider high-rise vs. low, flares vs. straight vs. taper, bagginess, stretchiness, denim weight, and more. But breathe deep. First, know that "Mall brands" (J.Crew, Uniqlo, etc.) and the affordable O.G.s—Levi's, Lee, and Wrangler—have much bigger sizing ranges than the indies. (We'll spare you a lesson in the economies of scale.) Plus, they tend to have plenty of brick-and-mortar outposts for trying on different styles if you're wondering about the recent relaxed-fit revolution or high-rise-curious. On the flip side, smaller companies experiment more, and aren't afraid to try something new.

If your priority is comfort, look for a pair of jeans with stretch, usually accomplished by weaving some elastane into the denim. Jill Guenza, Global VP of Women's Design at Levi Strauss & Co., suggests walking around in the jeans for several minutes as well as sitting and standing to test the stretch's recovery. “A pair of jeans with a well-engineered fit and high-quality stretch,” she says, “won’t require a lot of adjustment after a few minutes of movement.” Just know that stretch denim tends not to last as long as straight denim.


The Best Jean Brands, by Category

Click each link to jump down to that section. You'll see a breakdown of the brand and a few of our favorite pairs of jeans from each.


The Big Three

In the denim world, Levi's, Lee, and Wrangler are the most influential denim brands of all time, having (literally, in one case) invented the category and spent more than a century shaping how we think of blue jeans. As denim went from mining gear to workwear to closet staple for every human on earth, these three brands' impact on menswear and fashion is incalculable. They're all also massive brands, some of which have sub-brands (we'll get to those), so knowing how to parse The Big Three's massive catalog is crucial to getting historically good denim at solid prices.

Levi's

Levi's

501 Original Fit Jeans

Levi's

505 Regular Fit Jeans

Not including Levi's in this list would be like omitting Michael Jordan from the Hall of Fame. Levi's isn't just the most well-known jeans brand on the planet, it's the one that literally invented the damn things (way back in 1873). After all these years, they're still the yardstick by which all other jeans brands are measured. The straight-legged 501 remains thee iconic pair of jeans, available in a million fits and rinses. The 505 has a slightly roomier thigh, a bit of taper, and a zip fly (versus the 501's button fly).

Lee

Lee

Relaxed Fit Straight Leg Jean

Lee

Regular Fit Straight Leg Jean

Lee was one of the early denim pioneers, and the first to use a zipper fly. (Oh, and it invented overalls, too.) Today, the brand tends to ride on the budget side of the spectrum, with fits and washes that trend particularly dad-like. That said, Lee's denim continues to deliver on the brand's legacy of hard-wearing, good-value jeans.

Wrangler

Wrangler

13MWZ Cowboy Cut Original Fit Jean

Wrangler

Authentics Classic 5-pocket Regular Fit Cotton Jean

As the name suggests, Wrangler is geared toward cowboys—and that's not just some southern-fried fashion branding. Wrangler's long been the official jean of professional rodeo hunks, and at one point even claimed to make the heaviest denim in the world (14 oz., if you're wondering). The brand still lists denim weights on its website—a sign that it speaks the language of good jeans—and has since expanded into even hardier cuts. Though most of its jeans come with washes and distressing, Wrangler is one of the few brands that offers real raw denim at such a low price.


The Mall-Brand Mainstays

The death of the shopping mall has been somewhat over-exaggerated. Besides, the best mall brands are very much alive and well on the Internet, with fast shipping, easy returns, and often some eye-opening sales that include their denim. That said: not every mall brand is bringing an indigo A-game, so pay attention. Gap and Uniqlo have raised the bar on the denim you can get for under $100, while J.Crew and, more recently, Madewell are offering a wider range of on-trend fits and washes than before.

Gap

Gap

'90s Loose Carpenter Jeans

Gap

100% Organic Cotton '90s Loose Jeans

Gap's iconic khakis commercials from the late '90s made the mall brand a mecca for dusty tan chinos, but the brand is rooted in denim. It continues to produce solid jeans at reasonable prices while offering a smattering of more upscale selvedge options, too.

J.Crew

J.Crew

Classic Relaxed-fit Jean

Wallace & Barnes

Creased Slant-Pocket Jean

J.Crew's jeans selection is reliably solid; its bread and butter 484 slim-straight fit is a particular standout. But look to J.Crew's workwear-inspired Wallace & Barnes sub-label and you'll find some genuinely great jeans with vintage details that would raise the brow of any denim connoisseur.

Uniqlo

Uniqlo U

Relaxed Fit Jeans

Uniqlo

Stretch Selvedge Slim-fit Jeans

Uniqlo's mastered the affordability-to-style matrix better than any other brand in its category, and it excels at knitwear, outerwear, button-ups—and, of course, denim. The mega-retailer is a consistent go-to for anyone looking to cop their first pair of raw jeans. Just $50 for Japanese-milled selvedge? Still can't beat it.

Madewell

Madewell

1991 Loose Straight Jean

Madewell

1991 Bootcut Jeans

Though Madewell's mall brand status doesn't quite live up to its workwear-y moniker, the company makes decent jeans for anyone looking for well-fitting silhouettes and denim with a smidge of stretch.


The Reliable Upgrades

Sometimes the best jean brands are the ones that take what you know and love, and bring it to a new level. These brands tend to raise the bar on quality, which you'll see reflected in the price tags. They'll use high-quality Japanese denim or selvedge denim in tandem with top-quality hardware, more artful distressing, and more minute details. None of these brands stray far from the classic five-pocket blue jean formula, plus they're readily available both online and often at a nearby store if you're in a city.

Todd Snyder

Todd Snyder

Slim Fit Stretch Jean

Todd Snyder

Relaxed Fit Selvedge Jean

Is it at all surprising that do-it-all brand Todd Snyder also makes flawless fastball-down-the-middle denim? After all, the guy's CV includes stints at Ralph Lauren and J.Crew. Plus he's got a knack for high-quality fabrics and expert tailoring, not to mention an doctorate in Americana.

Levi's Vintage Clothing

Levi's Vintage Clothing

1937 501 Original Fit Selvedge Jeans

Levi's Vintage Clothing

1954 501 Original Fit Selvedge Jeans

Levi's Vintage Clothing is the reproduction arm of Levi's, delivering strict, stitch-for-stitch recreations of styles from the brand's vault. That includes hyper-accurate raw denim 501s from, say, 1944, but it also includes facsimiles of thrashed and shredded jeans picked up at high-profile auctions—with real-deal holes and patches reproduced from an actual pair of very rare vintage jeans.

Supreme

Supreme

Rigid Baggy Selvedge Jean

Supreme

Regular Jean

The secret of Supreme is that its often the brand's less-hyped pieces that deserve your attenion—and its jeans may be the ultimate proof. Look past the wild-style options with insane graphics splashed all over and you'll realize that Supreme's standard impeccably-fit jeans use some very good mid-weight selvedge denim that's built to take more than a few nasty spills on a skateboard.


The New-School Enthusiasts

Sometime in the ‘90s, a fresh wave of indigo helped re-introduce jeans to a generation that had grown up on Silver Tabs and Gap. Brands like A.P.C. and 3sixteen became gateway drugs for budding indigo obsessives looking for a new fit and dipping into their first pair of raw denim jeans. Meanwhile, Acne Studios and John Elliott founded brands that filtered a streetwear mindset into workwear’s #1 hit. Today they're all part of the denim establishment, in the best way possible.

A.P.C.

A.P.C.

Petit Standard jeans

A.P.C.

Standard Jeans

For many menswear fans, A.P.C. was a gateway not only into raw denim but into menswear as a whole. A.P.C.'s minimalist aesthetic coupled with high-quality fabrics made its logo-less jeans a hit in the late 2000s, when fashion was beginning to sober up from logomania. To this day, the Paris-based label continues to produce streamlined jeans and denim products better than most.

Acne Studios

Acne Studios

1991 Toj Jeans

Acne Studios

Loose-Fit Jeans

Acne Studios is better known these days for envelope-pushing fashion, but the Stockholm-based brand opened its doors as a film studio back in the '90s. When it started making a limited run of jeans exclusively for friends and family, the brand found its bag. Acne's got its hyper-sensitive finger on the pulse, with beautiful washes, full cuts, and surprising details like detachable denim belts.

3sixteen

3sixteen

Classic Tapered Double Black Selvedge Jean

3sixteen

CT-102xn Classic Tapered Natural Indigo Selvedge Jean

3sixteen’s lives, eats, and breathes denim, and the NYC brand expends a ridiculous amount of energy guaranteeing its wares trounce the competition. The brand's specialty jeans are crafted using custom fabrics from the legendary Kuroki Mills in Okayama, Japan—a name to know as you level-up your collection, whether you're on your sixth pair of jeans or your 60th.

John Elliott

John Elliott

Caribou Slim-Fit Jeans

John Elliott

The Daze Slim-Fit Distressed Jeans

John Elliott made it in Los Angeles streetwear thanks to his focus on elevating the humble sweatpant, spurring on luxury athleisure's near decade-long dominance. But aside from hefty hoodies and tailored sweats, Elliott's jeans offer some of the most energetic distressing around, and have been spotted on countless elite-level fashion plates.


The Freaky-Deaky Envelope-Pushers

A lot of jeansmakers like to look backwards. But some of the best jeans brands think of the 501 as Cro-Magnon denim, with so much more evolution to come. They're combining artisan techniques with cutting-edge printing technology, doctorate-level pattern-making, and wild ideas to reimagine the experience of buttoning up in blue.

Kapital

Kapital

Century Denim No.1.2.3 5P Monkey Cisco Jeans

Kapital

Slim-Fit Flared Appliquéd Jeans

Bonkers knitwear, threadbare sashiko jackets, woven puffer vests: Kapital fuses chaos and craft into an off-the-wall fun that rockstars and NBA athletes flock to. The brand's denim range stands out in particular for the insane level of detail and handwork that's often hidden behind the jaw-dropping ideas. Even on a patch-encrusted pair that would make a Boy Scout jealous, the intricate chainstitch embroidery, hand-done details, and top-notch fabric prove that quality never takes a back seat to the concept.

Y/Project

Y/Project

Blue Y-Belt Jeans

Y/Project

Evergreen Cowboy Cuff Organic-Cotton Jeans

Designer Glenn Martens decade-long run at the legendary Y/Project has yielded some of the most viral jeans of the 21st century. Not hard to see why when your jeans also look like cowboy boots. From sculptural delights to trompe l'oeil, Martens' denim jeans are really denim creations, and feel like art school experiments in the best way.

Tender

Tender

Type 132 Wide Jeans

Tender

Type 136 Oxford Jeans

Tender's approach to denim does not look like most other jeans you've ever seen. The U.K.-based brand focuses on clothes inspired by turn-of-the-century rail-worn designs, often employing natural dyes, indigo-alternatives, and unique pattern cutting to produce some of the most delightfully off-beat (and often heaviest) jeans you're likely to see.


The Artisanal Stalwarts

Blue jeans were born in America, but Japan has been the epicenter of the world's best denim for decades now. An early ‘90s Americana fascination saw Japanese jean brands sprout up, each one digging deep into the century-old history of denim. From the cotton to the exact shade of indigo to the silhouette and construction, these denim-obsessed brands pursued a perfection that they (and many others) felt had been lost in America for some time. Today, Japanese denim fabric is considered the best in the world, and you'll see it bragged about by everyone from J.Crew to Rick Owens. That said, these brands are carrying the revivalist torch that was lit some 30 years ago.

Orslow

OrSlow

107 Slim-Fit Selvedge Denim Jeans

OrSlow

105 Straight-Leg Selvedge Jeans

Out of the Japanese brands influenced by—or outright reproducing—period-correct work jackets and 1950s-era dungarees, Orslow is one of the most straightforward and accessible. The brand doesn't so much revive über obscure references as it does recreate jeans ripped straight from the kind of movie scenes that litter a menswear inspo board. From mid-century Ivy-inflected slim-straight jeans to classic 501-esque straight-leg five pockets with a classic redline selvedge detail, Orslow is a jeans brand that plays the hits just the way you want them.

Studio D'artisan

Studio D'Artisan

Fox cotton fiber jeans

Studio D'Artisan

Suvin Gold cotton fiber jeans

Gather 'round, kids, for a quick history lesson. Studio D'Artisan is one of the famed “Osaka 5,” the group name for five Japanese denim brands launched in the early '90s that were all dedicated to reproducing vintage Levi's with painstaking accuracy. (The other members: Evisu, Denime, Warehouse, and Full Count.) Where the other four brands expanded their missions, Studio D'artisan remains arguably the most revered because it hasn't wavered an inch. It produces the same grail denim season after season while laser-focused on craft—particularly by sourcing top-shelf materials like super rare Suvin gold cotton.

Samurai

Samurai

Samurai x Old Blue limited edition slim straight fit

Samurai

S211AX natural indigo relax tapered

Samurai's aesthetic is that of a Japanese biker blasting American rock ‘n’ roll. In keeping with its love of extremes, the brand makes some of the heaviest jeans around, including some with a truly bonkers 21 oz. denim. That's nearly twice as heavy as your average pair of Levi's, making Samurai's denim both a physical challenge and a badge of honor among denim cognoscenti.

The Real McCoy's

The Real McCoy's

Lot.001XX jeans

The Real McCoy's

Joe McCoy Lot 966BK black denim jeans

The Real McCoy's aims to create some of the most accurate vintage reproductions around—and it succeeds phenomenally. One example of the brand's obsession: its denim is woven from scratch on specific vintage looms to get the right tension and texture, making them nearly indistinguishable from genuinely vintage jeans.

RRL

RRL

Slim Fit Selvedge Denim Jeans

RRL

Slim Fit Selvedge Denim Jeans

Ralph Lauren's heritage Americana-inspired RRL sub-label is known as the triple-distilled essence of the menswear legend's personal cowboy-flavored aesthetic. Where Polo exists for the masses, RRL dives headlong into obscure references pulled from the company's bottomless vintage library. Witness the filled belt loops, hidden rivets, and throwback-style waistbands. And in the realest nod to modern denim reality, most of RRL's jeans are made in the U.S. using Japanese selvedge denim.


The Small-Batch Master Craftsmen

The most rarified of jean brands are smaller than small-batch. They're one-man masters of the denim genre operating at the level of a Savile Row tailor. These folks are obsessive about every part of the process, from sourcing to cutting to sewing—and tend to offer custom denim, often made entirely by themselves.

Glenn's Denim

Glenn's Denim

GD112 Slouchy Tapered 13oz. Jeans

Glenn's Denim

GD111 Slim Straight 13oz. Selvedge Denim Jean

Glenn Liburd is a real-life denim legend, having worked decades in the denim industry with The Big Three, not to mention a stint at Savile Row. His encyclopedic jeans knowledge has coalesced into a brand that is truly the cream-of-the-crop. Custom, American-made selvedge denim with masterful construction, somehow delivered at a surprisingly accessible price point? Yes, yes, and yes.

Paul Kruize

Paul Kruize

Custom Jeans

Paul Kruize's jeans are bespoke, and the not-insignificant price you pay for that pleasure comes back in details you'll see and feel. While most other brands use a range of machines to make a single pair of five-pocket blue jeans, Kruize operates a single machine to produce his product. Additionally, he stitches the buttonholes by hand and makes sure that every seam is felled (a.k.a., covered on the inside, which takes more work). The result? Jeans that are as beautiful on the inside as they are on the outside.

Keruk

Keruk

Custom Jeans

No machines: just two pairs of hands, needles, and thread. That's all Keruk needs to make a pair of jeans. It's extremely rare for anyone to make a garment without a sewing machine, which makes these the ultimate grail for any denim enthusiast.

The Designer Labels With Legit Denim Chops

Designer denim sometimes gets a bad rap as being expensive without merit. That's not always wrong. But a select group of fashion-first labels are spinning jeans in futuristic ways while ensuring that the quality matches the head-spinning concepts. Brands like Diesel, Rick Owens, and Our Legacy in particular prove that legit designer denim exists, and can be just as expressive of a brilliant vision as anything else on a runway.

Diesel

Diesel

Fish Cargo Pants

Diesel

Diesel Straight-Leg Logo-Buckle Detail Jeans

If you're looking for some of high-quality denim jeans with all the subtlety of an airhorn, welcome to Diesel. The Italian brand hasn't yet met a pair of jeans it can't warp, wash, and bedazzle into a maximalist showoff's dream. Under the creative direction of Glenn Martens, Diesel's denim innovations have helped put brand back on the fashion map, with its jeans regularly selling out.

Rick Owens

Rick Owens

Geth Jeans

Rick Owens DRKSHDW

Bolan Banana Jeans

Rick Owens' dark, brooding designs are instantly recognizable, but his wild takes on jeans still manage to steal the show. To be clear, they range from very expensive to very, very, very expensive. But of the countless designer brands taking their slice of the blue jeans pie, Owens is one of the few that actually delivers on quality by using serious, heavy-duty Japanese denim to make his mind-bending creations.

Our Legacy

Our Legacy

'70s Cut Jeans

Our Legacy

Third Cut Digital Denim

Our Legacy's eye-catching designs—the dialed-in Swedes cultivate a vibe that's somewhere between punk and sleazy—has earned the label legions of devoted followers. The brand's Camion boots are a big hit with fashion fiends, but the real innovation happens in the jeans department: think tromp l'oeil denim prints, slashed panels, and reflective trims.