Most men’s wardrobes are full of stuff that technically fits but never quite gets worn. The gym shirt from 2019. Those jeans are okay, but not comfortable. The hoodie that pills after three washes. The fix isn’t more clothes, it’s the right ones.
Think of it this way: getting dressed in the morning should take about three minutes, not fifteen. When every piece in your wardrobe actually works, fits properly, feels good against your skin, and pairs with at least two or three other things you own, you stop second-guessing yourself and just get on with your day. Here are 8 essentials genuinely worth investing in.
The Basics Every Man Should Have in His Wardrobe

These aren’t trend pieces or seasonal buys, they’re the things you’ll reach for week in, week out, regardless of what else is hanging in your wardrobe. Get these right and everything else falls into place.
High-Quality Cotton Tees
A good cotton tee is one of the most-worn pieces in any wardrobe. The issue is that most men own ten of them, and none are particularly good. They are rather thin, boxy, and prone to shrinking after two washes. The fix is simple: fewer, better ones.
Look for mid-weight cotton (around 180-200 gsm) with a clean, slightly fitted cut. It should hold its shape after washing and not go see-through when the sun hits it. Pick up three or four in rotation, and you’re sorted for most casual situations.
|
Fabric Type |
Feel |
Durability |
Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
|
100% Combed Cotton |
Soft, breathable |
High |
Everyday wear, warm climates |
|
Cotton/Poly Blend |
Slightly stiffer |
High |
Retains shape, resists shrinking |
|
Supima/Pima Cotton |
Luxuriously soft |
Medium |
Premium feel, worth the extra spend |
|
Slub Cotton |
Textured, casual |
Medium |
Relaxed weekend looks |
|
Bamboo/Cotton |
Very soft, cool |
Lower |
Hot weather, sensitive skin |
Versatile Chinos
Chinos sit in the sweet spot between jeans and formal trousers. They’re smarter than denim but more relaxed than dress pants. A well-cut pair in a neutral colour can handle the office on a casual Friday, dinner, or running errands, without looking like you tried too hard or not at all.
Slim or straight fit tends to be the most adaptable. Stick to stone, navy, or khaki for your first pair. A flat front and a clean hem keep things looking intentional. One decent pair replaces at least three outfits that currently aren’t working for you.
|
Chino Colour |
Pairs well with |
Occasion fit |
|---|---|---|
|
Stone / Khaki |
Navy tee, white shirt, olive jacket |
Casual to smart-casual |
|
Navy |
White tee, grey hoodie, chambray shirt |
Most versatile: office to weekend |
|
Olive |
Cream tee, tan boots, brown belt |
Weekend, outdoors, casual |
|
Charcoal |
White shirt, black sneakers, dark jacket |
Smart-casual, evening out |
|
Burgundy |
Grey tee, white Oxford, suede loafers |
Statement colour, autumn/winter |
|
Quick tip: The pants’ waistband should sit comfortably without a belt, but a slim leather belt in tan or brown still completes the look. Skip the formal buckle and go for something simple and flat. |
|---|
Moisture-Wicking Underwear
Nobody talks about underwear in wardrobe roundups, which is strange because it’s the layer closest to your body for the entire day. If it’s uncomfortable, you’ll be uncomfortable.
Moisture-wicking fabric moves sweat away from the skin rather than sitting in it. This makes a real difference during warm weather, long commutes, or any amount of physical activity. The fit matters too; you want something that stays in place without bunching or riding up.
|
Fabric |
Moisture Wicking |
Breathability |
Best use |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Microfibre/Nylon blend |
Excellent |
High |
Active days, warm climates |
|
Modal |
Good |
High |
All-day comfort, soft against skin |
|
Cotton/Elastane |
Low |
Moderate |
Cooler days, light activity only |
|
Merino Wool blend |
Excellent |
High |
Travel, temperature regulation |
A few brands have built their innerwear specifically around this: Jockey’s microfibre range, Dollar’s modal blends, and XYXX Crew’s everyday basics. If you’re restocking anyway, it’s worth checking out XYXX coupon codes rather than paying full price.
|
Quick tip: Boxer briefs are the most versatile cut for everyday wear. They work under chinos, gym shorts, and anything else without creating awkward lines or bunching throughout the day. |
|---|
Breathable Hoodies
A hoodie that’s heavy enough to feel warm but light enough not to make you sweaty indoors, that’s the one worth owning. Most hoodies err toward one extreme or the other. You want the middle ground: French terry or a lighter fleece-back cotton that breathes well and doesn’t make you look like you’re heading to the gym.
Fit matters here more than most people realise. Something that skims the body without being tight is perfect. A zip-up gives you more flexibility with layering; a pullover tends to look cleaner overall. Prioritise heather grey, off-white, navy, and charcoal; these pair with almost everything.
|
Hoodie’s GSM Range |
Weight feel |
Best season |
Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Under 250 gsm |
Very light |
Spring/summer |
Too thin for most |
|
260-320 gsm |
Mid-weight |
Year-round |
Sweet spot |
|
340-380 gsm |
Heavyweight |
Autumn/winter |
Great in cold climates |
|
400+ gsm |
Very heavy |
Cold only |
Less adaptable |
Classic Sneakers
Clean, simple sneakers are the most adaptable footwear most men will ever own. Not chunky trainers, just a low-profile, well-constructed sneaker in white, off-white, or grey.
A clean leather or canvas sneaker looks at home with chinos, jeans, or even slightly smarter trousers if the rest of the outfit is right. The key is keeping them clean. One good pair will do more work for you than five pairs of mediocre ones.
|
Sneaker Style |
Upper Material |
Best Worn With |
Ease of Care |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Low-top leather |
Leather/synthetic |
Chinos, smart-casual trousers |
Easy |
|
Canvas low-top |
Canvas |
Shorts, jeans, casual wear |
Medium |
|
Suede low-top |
Suede |
Slim jeans, chinos, autumn fits |
High maintenance |
|
Knit/mesh runner |
Engineered knit |
Casual daily wear, light activity |
Easy |
Dark Wash Jeans
Jeans are in nearly every man’s wardrobe already, but dark wash jeans earn their place because they work in smarter settings without looking out of place. A deep indigo or charcoal rinse paired with a clean shirt and decent shoes reads as intentional, not casual.
Fit is everything here. Slim or straight cut, nothing tapered to the ankle unless that’s your personal style, and a mid-rise that sits at your natural waist. Avoid pre-distressing and heavy fading. The idea is a pair that passes as a smart option when needed, and a relaxed one when not.
|
Jeans’ Wash Type |
Formality level |
Pairs well with |
|---|---|---|
|
Raw/deep indigo |
Most versatile, near-smart |
Oxford shirts, Chelsea boots, blazers |
|
Mid indigo |
Smart-casual |
Tees, OCBDs, clean sneakers |
|
Light wash |
Casual only |
Tees, hoodies, casual shoes |
|
Distressed/ripped |
Very casual |
Graphic tees, trainers |
Oxford Button-Down Shirts
If there’s one collared shirt that earns a permanent spot in a practical wardrobe, it’s the Oxford cloth button-down. The fabric has a slight texture that makes it look more relaxed than a formal dress shirt, but the structure means you can wear it tucked or untucked.
Start with a pale blue or white. Both work with chinos, dark jeans, or under a casual jacket. Roll the sleeves to the elbow in summer, keep them down in winter.
|
Shirt Colour |
Works with |
Occasion |
Tucked or untucked |
|---|---|---|---|
|
White |
Everything |
Casual to smart-casual |
Both |
|
Pale blue |
Navy, grey, khaki chinos |
Office casual, dinner |
Both |
|
Chambray blue |
Dark jeans, olive, stone |
Relaxed weekend, casual |
Untucked |
|
Oxford stripe |
Navy, charcoal trousers |
Smart-casual, work |
Tucked |
A Lightweight Jacket
Every outfit needs something to reach for when the temperature drops or you’re moving between indoors and outdoors. A lightweight jacket fills that role without adding bulk or requiring a specific dress code to make sense.
The three most adaptable options are a Harrington jacket (clean, slightly classic, works over almost anything), a work coat (relaxed and practical in neutral shades), and a lightweight bomber (casual and versatile, best in olive, navy, or black). Any one of these in a neutral colour will pull multiple outfits together.
How Will These Menswear Picks Help You?
Eight categories. Roughly 18 to 20 pieces total if you pick up a few of each. That’s enough to cover most everyday situations without the wardrobe feeling cluttered or overwhelming. The point isn’t to dress impressively, it’s to stop wasting mental energy on what to wear and to actually feel comfortable in what you’ve got on.
|
Essential |
How many do you need |
|---|---|
|
Cotton tees |
4 to 5 |
|
Chinos |
2 pairs (different colours) |
|
Moisture-wicking underwear |
4 to 6 pairs |
|
Classic sneakers |
1 to 2 pairs |
|
Hoodies |
2 (zip-up + pullover) |
|
Dark wash jeans |
1 to 2 pairs |
|
Oxford shirts |
2 to 3 (white, pale blue, one other) |
|
Lightweight jacket |
1 (choose your style) |
Start with whatever’s most obviously missing from your current rotation. Replace the worst items first, not everything at once. Quality over volume, every time.