The Best Olympic 2026 Uniforms to Look For at the Winter Games

Image may contain Kim Goeun Adult Person Clothing and Glove
Photo: Goyol Cashmere

With Italian design heritage in the backdrop and leading brands dressing teams from around the world, the 2026 Olympic uniforms are looking like they would be just as at home on the streets of any international fashion week as they will be on the podium. As the 2026 Milan Winter Olympic Games descend on Europe’s snowy playground from February 6 to 22, the competition off the ice and slopes is certainly shaping up to be a style spectacle in its own right.

Like in recent Games past, this year’s team kits feel less like standard-issue sportswear and more like chic cultural statements. Ceremonial looks channel national heritage through the lens of major designers and iconic brands—Ralph Lauren, Emporio Armani, and Moncler—while performance gear from heavyweights like Adidas and Lululemon has been engineered for the challenges of ice, altitude, and speed. Whether ornate and symbolic or streamlined and technical, each uniform serves as an emblem of national identity; of course function is just as important as form, if not more, for this year’s Olympic and Paralympic athletes.

As we gear up for the Winter Games, here’s a peek at some of the best Olympic 2026 uniforms that have been revealed so far, some of which are—bonus—also available to buy for mere mortals, too.

Instagram content

Goyol Cashmere for Team Mongolia

For the 2026 Winter Games, Team Mongolia’s uniforms are once again proving to be among the most talked-about looks. Designed by Goyol Cashmere, the ceremonial outfits reinterpret traditional deel garments—the long, belted robes of Mongolia’s nomadic heritage—in a super chic contemporary cut. Featuring premium cashmere (essential for Mongolia’s harsh winters) and detailed with silk and horn-inspired motifs, the uniforms bring the country’s ancestral craft into the global spotlight. It’s a blend of functional warmth and cultural storytelling that is sure to make Mongolia’s walk into San Siro for the Opening Ceremony a must-see.

Image may contain Evan Bates Madison Chock Clothing Coat Adult Person Jacket Cap and Hat
Ice dancers Evan Bates and Madison Chock in the Ralph Lauren opening ceremony uniforms.Photo: Courtesy of Ralph Lauren

Ralph Lauren for Team USA

For its 10th consecutive Winter Olympics outfitting the United States delegation, Ralph Lauren delivers ceremonial uniforms that emphasize heritage craftsmanship. The Opening Ceremony ensembles pair a winter-white wool coat featuring classic wooden toggle closures, with a knit sweater with American flag intarsia and and tailored trousers. The Closing Ceremony look will lean into sporty, graphic color-blocked puffers and utilitarian layers that reinterpret vintage ski aesthetics via wool turtleneck sweaters and white utility pants. Accessories, including knit hats and suede alpine boots with red laces, round out the kits, which the brand describes as rooted in optimism and timeless American style: “Our design philosophy has always been about creating dreams and telling stories through style, and these uniforms, both timeless and modern, reflect the passion, optimism, and relentless pursuit of excellence that embody the American spirit,” noted David Lauren, Ralph Lauren’s chief branding and innovation officer, in a release.

Image may contain Clothing Coat Jacket Pants Outdoors Person Nature Cap Hat and Snow
Photo: J.Crew

J.Crew and Skims for U.S. Ski Snowboard and Team USA

Both J.Crew and Skims have also joined the Olympic 2026 uniforms mix to put their distinctive stamps on Team USA’s off-mountain wardrobes. Thanks to J.Crew’s new three-year partnership with U.S. Ski Snowboard, the vibe is pure alpine nostalgia and features a limited-edition collection of knitwear, fleece, loungewear, accessories, and outerwear, bringing the classic American prepster sensibility to après-ski pieces. Think: fair isle sweaters, brushed wool rollnecks, and cozy pullovers in navy, red and grey.

Meanwhile, Skims is extending its ongoing partnership with Team USA into Milano-Cortina with a fourth capsule collection centered on elevated basics and loungewear. The limited drop reimagines the brand’s buttery fabrics in red-white-and-blue palettes and flag motifs across sleepwear and base layers inspired by athletes’ pre- and post-competition routines.

Instagram content

Emporio Armani for Team Italia

Italy’s own delegation sweeps into Milano-Cortina 2026 under the sartorial guidance of EA7, Emporio Armani’s sportswear brand. The brand has served as official outfitter for the Italian Olympic team since 2012, but this year’s uniforms feel especially poignant giving the designer’s recent passing. “Working for and with Italian athletes is always a pleasure and a source of great pride. I chose a single color, white, to suggest harmony with the snow-capped peaks,” Giorgio Armani explained back in September 2025. “Among the values of sport, respect is perhaps one of the highest, and I captured it in an idea of simplicity, clarity, and purity.” Thus, the kits are defined by a clean white palette that echoes the snow-covered peaks of the Dolomites as well as Milan’s crisp design sensibility with sharp tailoring, three-dimensional “Italia” embroidery, and refined accessories—including gloves and boots. As an extra patriotic touch, the lyrics from the Italian national anthem are also printed inside the jackets and on polo shirts—a tribute to iconic Italian style as the host-nation takes the spotlight on the global stage.

Instagram content

Lululemon for Team Canada

Canada’s official Winter Olympic uniforms, designed by Canadian athleticwear favorite Lululemon, are anchored by the national symbol: an oversized red maple leaf. The patriotic motif dominates everything from puffer coats to quilted vests that convert into a scarf or pillow, blending the country’s classic iconography with clever performance design. Inspired by Canada’s epic landscape, the uniforms also come in shades ranging from deep reds to blue-greens, while thermoregulation technology and adaptive fits ensure athletes’ comfort. Podium wear extends the vibe with red jackets detailed in topographic patterns that echo the country’s diverse terrain.

Instagram content

Adidas and Ben Sherman for Team Great Britain

Great Britain’s 2026 Olympic uniforms for Milano-Cortina features dual creative forces thanks to Adidas and Ben Sherman.

Adidas’ athletic apparel showcases classic national colors with bold reinterpretations of the Union Jack woven into winter sport silhouettes: “Our ambition was to create kits that not only help athletes tackle the challenges of winter sports but also capture what makes the Games so special. We have done this through a focus on simple yet powerful design which embodies the character of each nation,” notes Adidas’ specialist sports design director Jacqueline King.

Meanwhile British brand Ben Sherman, returning as the official ceremonial wear supplier for its fourth consecutive Games, has reimagined classic codes of menswear for the alpine conditions with everything from wool dogtooth topcoats to mock-neck sweaters with raised-stripe Union motifs to oversized fair isle knitwear inspired by the Dolomite landscape. And, keep your eyes peeled for a collaboration with five-time Olympic medallist and flagbearer Tom Daley, who hand-designed the bold, cable-knit scarves and winter hats worn by Team GB’s flagbearers.

Image may contain Photography Accessories Goggles Face Head Person Portrait Adult Nature Outdoors and Cap
Photo: Moncler

Moncler for Team Brazil

For Milano-Cortina 2026, Moncler returns to the Olympic arena as the official and technical sponsor for Team Brazil’s Opening and Closing Ceremonies, as well as for its Alpine ski squad uniforms. Bringing its signature blend of high-performance insulation, precision tailoring, and ski-inspired polish to quilted down shells and technical parkas rendered in ivory and white, the brand has also create a sleek, star-accented race suit, which it developed in collaboration with Brazilian athlete Pinheiro Braathen.

Instagram content

Sportscraft and Karbon for Team Australia

Australia’s Olympic 2026 uniforms were crafted in partnership with Sportscraft and inspired by the country’s past Olympic styles. The kits feature gold-button detailing and a green-and-gold palette, nodding to nostalgic looks of the 1990s. There’s also a patriotic touch hidden inside: the names of every Australian Winter Olympian, with past gold medalists highlighted in—what else?—gold. Indigenous artwork by David Bosun and Paul Fleming further celebrates the breadth of Australia’s athletic community.

Instagram content

Le Coq Sportif for Team France

Le Coq Sportif’s official 2026 collection for the French Olympic and Paralympic teams channels the nation’s tricolor palette of blue, white, and red into a subdued palette of icy blue, cream, and soft red with performance-ready winter pieces designed for extreme conditions. Combining ergonomic cuts and technical fabrics with a distinctly French elegance, many looks have a ’70s bent: zip-up sweatshirts with wide collars, straight-cut pants, and recycled sherpa trim. As it did for Paris 2024, the brand also reinterprets the country’s flag—this time, by rubbing pigments onto crumpled fabric and spray-painting it to create a “visual reminiscent of a topographic map.” There are also outdoor boots by Vibram and cozy knit hats emblazoned with the Olympic logo and the words “Team France.” “From frosty blue sweatshirts inspired by the 1976 archives to elegant duffle coats worn on the catwalks, each creation embodies exceptional French craftsmanship,” notes the brand.

Instagram content

Dale of Norway for Team Norway

Norway’s Olympic sweaters carry historical weight: Dale of Norway first created the official Olympic knitwear in Cortina in 1956. The brand returns for 2026 paying homage to that legacy with a new high-neck, half-zip sweater crafted in pure Norwegian wool on the outside and 100% merino wool on the inside and features a traditional Nordic geometric pattern in two colors: deep red and dark navy blue on soft white.