Fashion

8 Trainer Trends To Look Out For In 2025

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Last year, no fashion item made headlines quite like Adidas Sambas. They were everywhere until they became too popular, prompting some people to sell them, some to bury them in their wardrobes and some to ignore the noise and wear them regardless. By contrast, the trainer trends that defined the latter half of the year – and those forecast for 2025 – suggest many people are striving for less mainstream designs. In an effort to avoid another Samba situation, new-gen fashion fans have taken to customising trainers with charms, chains, ribbons and colourful laces, or even unearthing lesser-known styles from the archive.

Of course, there has been a conveyor belt of cult sneakers that, like Sambas, have been worn by what feels like every celebrity and fashion insider (though strategic seeding is partly to thank for this). In no particular order: Onitsuka Tiger Mexico 66s, Puma Speedcats and various New Balance models (9060s, 530s, 574s and Aimé Leon Dore’s collab versions) have been popular. And best believe that crowds at Oasis’s reunion tour this summer will be two-stepping in Gallagher-inspired Adidas trainers (Liam Gallagher has collaborated with the brand on several takes on Spezials).

Also doing the rounds on socials: high-top boxing trainers, which are another cult Adidas style (the Japan Hs and Rasants have appeared in many an outfit picture on Instagram), and were also seen on the runways at Loewe, where Jonathan Anderson introduced a taller version of the brand’s Ballet Runner, and at Stella McCartney, where Tippex-white fringed styles walked the catwalk. Supple suede trainers have been another hit for the street-style set, with styles from Miu Miu’s collaboration with New Balance, Dries Van Noten, The Row and Chloé among the most popular.

Other predictions: the comeback of skater trainers that “could have been stolen from your best friend’s older brother’s room in 2002, swiped from next to his Playstation 2”, as my colleague Daisy Jones recently observed. Based on the omnipresence of AI and material innovations, I predict some technological elements to be thrown into the mix, too, along with a continued obsession with performance trainers and Gorpcore (Salmons, Hokas, Merrells, Vibrams and Asics continue dominate here) and pitch-worthy styles inspired by the women’s Euros happening in July. Of course, there will also be an endless stream of collaborations. Watch this space. Scroll on for six trainer trends to note for 2025.


The standout trainer trends to look out for in 2025, at a glance:


Partnerships, partnerships, partnerships

Collaborations have always been a powerful tool on the sneaker landscape, with the most coveted styles selling at inflated prices on resale sites long after their initial release. Last year saw continued success for the on-going partnerships between Wales Bonner and Adidas and Miu Miu and New Balance. With more brands jumping on the bandwagon at every turn, expect 2025 to be big on the collaboration front.

Wales Bonner X Adidas

Superstar Sneakers

New Balance

Black 530 SL Leather Sneakers

Joe Freshgoods X New Balance

1000 When Things Were Pure Pack

Kiko Kostadinov X Asics

Gel-Flammae Trainers

Step back in time

Trainer wins of recent years have been steeped in nostalgia. Yesteryear shoes bound for a return? Nike’s Noughties-hailing Shox – as Daisy put it, the “anti Samba”, which were reinterpreted as a mule by Martine Rose – Air Max 95s and 97s (the trainers of choice among ravers during my uni years), as well as the more humble Air Max 1s and Converse. My colleague Daniel Rodgers and I have also discussed whether he should bring back his Balenciaga Triple Ss (granted, they’re only seven years old, but they still feel kind of nostalgic).

Nike

Air Max 97

Balenciaga

Triple S Sneakers

Converse

Chuck Taylor All Star Trainers

The hybrids

My former Vogue colleague Alex Kessler road-tested New Balance’s 1906L loafer-trainers ahead of their launch last year – one of the many sneaker hybrids that entered the chat in 2024. Elsewhere, Cecilie Bahnsen released sporty Mary Janes via her collaboration with Asics and Simone Rocha experimented with track-soled ballerinas, while Salomon unveiled a backless mule version of its XT-4 silhouette, made in collaboration with MM6 Maison Margiela. Salomon also joined forces with Sandy Liang to create coquettish ribboned sneakers – which tapped into the customisation trend of adding charms, chains and jewellery that has swept social feeds. This is a movement that Molly Rooyakkers, founder of @Style.Analytics, says can make “an otherwise standard item feel personal”.

Asics X Cecilie Bahnsen

Embellished Rubber-Trimmed Mesh Sneakers

MM6 Maison Margiela X Salomon

XT-4 Sneaker Mules

Kilter

Strong Shoe Laces

Simone Rocha

Beaded Classic Tracker Sneakers

Sk8er styles

Skater trainers are back. The antithesis of streamlined silhouettes that have dominated of late, these chunky foamy stompers are shouty, bold and brazen. It takes the right styling to wear them – they’re not for everyone. A statement shoe by definition, but not a statement shoe by design. Vans, though, could be destined for mass appeal: I’ve seen a noticeable uptick in both the slip-ons and Old Skools, worn by the same crowd that were early endorsers of Sambas.

és

Accel OG Skate Shoes

Vans

Checkerboard Classic Slip-On Shoes

Louis Vuitton

LV Skate Trainers

Etnies

Kingpin Trainers

Pitch kicks

“With the women’s Euros coming up in summer 2025, get ready to see even more football-inspired sneakers everywhere,” asserts Rachel Makar, senior director of merchandising at StockX. Football fever already took over fashion during the men’s Euros – football shirts and scarves became a style fixture off the pitch – so prepare for 2.0 this summer. At the same time, Oasis will be on their reunion tour – Britpop is also, of course, intrinsically linked with football culture – so prepare to see fans rocking three-stripe trainers (and parkas, and mod cuts…).

Adidas

Samba Trainers

Nike

Air Max Plus Trainers

Adidas

Handball Spezial Trainers

Nike

Total 90 Trainers

Gorphardcore

Gorpcore is no longer a trend – it’s a lifestyle. I’ve overheard many a gorpy garb chat around my East London local, dispensed by guys dressed in parachute Gramicci trousers or Needles trackies, Beams cardigans and some kind of waterproof, ambling about with an ARCS bag slung across their body. They pine after performance trainers, including Salomons, Merrells, Hokas and Asics – the latter of which has out-performed most running shoe brands according to Emily Minea, director of merchandising at GOAT, who dubs it “the ultimate nondescript running brand”. I’ve also heard a couple of cliché Hackney dwellers moot the idea of Vibram V-Trails and wondered if they’d be down for Tabi trainers, should they enter the mainstream beyond Margiela – Molly predicts toe details could gain traction in 2025.

Salomon

XT-6 Trainers

Asics

Gel-Kayano 14 Trainers

Merrell

Moab Speed 2 Trainers

Hoka

Tor Summit Trainers

In the ring

Loewe spring/summer 2025.

Boxing trainers, defined for their slimline silhouettes and tall uppers that hit the mid-calf, are doing the rounds on social feeds right now. On the runways, they were seen at Loewe – where there were multiple high-top versions of the brand’s cult Ballet Runner, with the same swirling anagram insignia on the side – Dior, and Stella McCartney. Adidas’s various styles have also been popular: namely, the Japan H trainers, which feature the three stripe motif, and the curvaceous Rasant Mids.

LOEWE

Ballet Runner 2.0

Adidas

Japan H Trainers

Onitsuka Tiger

Mexico Mid Runner

Adidas x Stella McCartney

Fringed Sneakers

Soft to touch

Melodie Jeng/Getty Images

Suede trainers are nothing new: many of the classic styles, like Adidas Gazelles, are famously made from suede. But there has been a noticeable resurgence in trainers that might have been traditionally made from leather wrapped in suede, namely Nike’s Cortez, which were originally crafted in white leather with blue and red accents, and now available in multiple suede colourways. Miu Miu’s aforementioned collaboration with New Balance, which saw the sportswear brand’s 530 reinterpreted in suede with cord laces — as both regular trainers and mules.

Dries Van Noten

Leather-Trimmed Suede Sneakers

Totême

The Sport Sneakers

Nike

Cortez Brushed Suede Sneakers

COS

Minimal Leather Trainers