The devil works hard, but the best navy blue suit works harder. The unsung hero of many an enviable wardrobe, a well-tailored navy suit is professional enough to wear to a job interview, serious enough for a wedding or a funeral, and when mixed and matched with jeans, chinos, sweaters, polos—or, okay, pretty much anything else in your closet—ready to add a dash of pulled-together polish to your more casual fits. Hell, you’d have to squint pretty hard to find a destination, aside from maybe the weight room or a karate dojo, where a navy blue suit (or its constituent pieces) would look remotely out of place.
But as easy as it is to make an argument in favor of adding the suiting squad’s most versatile member to your quiver of clothing, finding the perfect specimen can be a serious challenge. Because there are a lot of navy suits on the market, and some are quantifiably worthier of closet space than others, your pals at GQ Recommends went deep on the absolute best of ‘em, each ready and raring to see you through all of the imminent spring weddings, date nights, weekdays at the office, and countless other occasions in impeccable fashion.
The Best Navy Blue Suit Overall: Buck Mason Angelino Wool Graduate Suit, $996
The Best Budget Navy Blue Suit: J.Crew Kenmare Relaxed-Fit Suit, $800
The Best Double-Breasted Navy Blue Suit: Todd Snyder Tropical Wool Wythe Suit, $996
The Best Upgrade Navy Blue Suit: Sid Mashburn Kincaid No. 3 Suit, $1695
The Best Navy Blue Suit for Tailoring Nerds: Saman Amel Wool Suit, $3550
Best Navy Blue Suit Overall: Buck Mason Angelino Wool Graduate Suit
Buck Mason focuses on fit and fabric with a dash of Steve McQueen ruggedness mixed in, which is exactly what their Graduate blazer and pants deliver. This season, the dedicated menswear nerds at brand’s HQ have delivered a new version of the best-selling Graduate in English-made fresco wool that’s tailor-made for LA weather. The fabric’s high-twist yarns and open weave make it breathable enough for sweltering days, while the fully-canvassed jacket and natural shoulders give it enough gravitas for red carpet premieres (or whatever else you’ve got going on this summer.)
As with the other members of the Graduate lineup, the three-roll-two jacket (a two-button style with a third button tucked under the lapel roll for additional volume) is substantial enough to see you through most of the year, with patch pockets and a single vent that casually pay homage to the heyday of Ivy League style. True to its name, this remains the perfect suit—both in versatility and price—for anyone starting on their tailoring journey.
Best Budget Navy Blue Suit: J.Crew Kenmare Relaxed-Fit Suit
The heyday of the Ludlow suit may be over (and with it the era of thigh-hugging trousers and sockless ankles) but J.Crew is still among the most reliable sources for maximum suiting clout on a minimal budget. The Kenmare, in contrast to its famously slim sibling, offers an altogether more relaxed silhouette complete with wider lapels and roomier flat-front trousers. This gives it what menswear illuminati would call a superior drape (the way a fabric hangs on your body and moves with you) as does the Kenmare’s refined wool fabric from Loro Piana, the legendary century-old mill in Italy.
Those who’ve gone deeper down the tailoring rabbit hole might note the lack of higher-end touches like operable cuff buttons (aka surgeon’s cuffs) and full canvassing (the invisible layer of padding on a suit jacket that helps it keep its shape), but it’s still a heck of a lot of suit for well under a grand.
Best Double-Breasted Navy Blue Suit: Todd Snyder Tropical Wool Wythe Suit
Todd Snyder, NYC’s majordomo of menswear, cut his teeth as the head of menswear for J.Crew, where he will forever be remembered as the guy who designed the genre-defining Ludlow suit. Nearly two decades later, Snyder has a keener eye for tailoring than ever and is ready to change the game once again with his newest silhouette, the Wythe. Just as the Ludlow was an advanced style move for the late aughts, the Wythe is a needle-moving proposition for the mid-2020s, with wider lapels, double-pleated trousers, and (in this case) a powerful double-breasted cut.
The real genius of this garment, however, is the way the muted dark blue tropical-weight virgin wool (milled in Italy with just a hint of stretch) perfectly tempers the boldness of the wider, double-breasted silhouette. If you’re interested in dabbling in the world of double-breasted power suits without going full American Gigolo, this is a great place to start.
Best Upgrade Navy Blue Suit: Sid Mashburn Kincaid No. 3 Suit
When you think “classic navy suit,” this two-piece number from Atlanta’s favorite tailor is probably what you’re picturing. The Kincaid No. 3 is Mashburn’s Goldilocks suit, with a just-right blend of high-quality construction, a slim-but-not-skinny silhouette, and versatile notch lapels. Mashburn’s suiting is priced in the middle of the ready-to-wear scale, but details like the English-made high-twist wool fabric (which, aside from looking sharp, is naturally wrinkle-resistant), surgeon’s cuffs, and a three-layer canvassed jacket that will adapt to the shape of your body over time are proof that you’re getting your money’s worth.
Best Navy Blue Suit for Tailoring Nerds: Saman Amel Wool Suit
Some suits lean more old-school, some lean more avant-garde, and some mask delightfully avant-garde details in old-school form. Stockholm’s Saman Amel sets this three-roll-two firmly in the latter category, with its combination of wide, notch lapels and a slightly shrunken fit. Despite its right-now energy, details like welted pockets and a deadly serious navy-on-navy Italian wool twill fabric give it plenty of staying power.
Appropriately from a brand rooted in skate culture, Knickerbocker’s suiting is designed to be as easy-wearing as a chore coat and a pair of wide-leg Dickies. Made from a sturdy cotton twill and generously cut to accommodate layers (like, say, one of Knickerbocker’s covetable rugby sweaters), this holds down the casual end of the navy suit spectrum with finesse.
Anglo-Italian is a brand for suiting purists. No fashion, no gimmicks, no markdowns, just great suits in classic fits made with top-quality workmanship. Crafted from a Tuscan herringbone wool-linen fabric that’s been gently tumbled for a soft finish, this navy joint boasts high-end details like hand-stitched lapels and buttonholes that offer a taste of the bespoke life for a (relatively) reasonable off-the-rack price.
Great inventions have a way of standing the test of time, and linen is right there alongside Silly Putty and the wheel. For the last 10,000 years, give or take, humans have been turning linen cloth into all kinds of things, including suits, and it’s a club you’d be well-served to join. Consider this crisp summerweight number as your initiation. As ever, Mr. Porter’s house brand provides maximum bang for your buck, and the fabric’s dark blue hue does wonders to minimize linen’s signature wrinkles.
The amazing thing about corduroy isn’t just that it’ll instantly make you look at least 60% more professorial, it’s the fact that you can wear it all year round. The fabric’s famously fuzzy ribbed texture is a natural fit for autumn and winter (especially in shades of brown and green) but like all cotton fabrics, it’s remarkably breathable in summer, too. That makes this navy corduroy suit a decidedly bolder option than your standard wool number for summer weddings and other dressy events, as well as a reliable year-rounder.
The best suits are the ones you’re inclined to get the most use out of, and everything about this single-button jacket and pleated trousers makes them worthy of heavy rotation in your wardrobe, both individually and together. Made at Stòffa’s workshop in Southern Italy, the jacket’s shirt-style construction, boxy fit, and lightweight tropical wool fabric help it look just as good with jeans and loafers as it does in full suit mode.
The problem with the slim-fitting suits of the 2010s wasn’t their body-hugging cut, it was so many brands' insistence that anyone can and should wear them. Simply put, slim-fit suits generally look best on tall, slim bodies, and have the tendency to make everyone else look lumpy and uncomfortable. If you’re a member of the former category, Dries Van Noten has your number right here.
Style is subjective, we know—that’s the fun of it. But we’re serious about helping our audience get dressed. Whether it’s the best white sneakers, the flyest affordable suits, or the need-to-know menswear drops of the week, GQ Recommends’ perspective is built on years of hands-on experience, an insider awareness of what’s in and what’s next, and a mission to find the best version of everything out there, at every price point.
Our staffers aren’t able to try on every single piece of clothing you read about on GQ.com (fashion moves fast these days), but we have an intimate knowledge of each brand’s strengths and know the hallmarks of quality clothing—from materials and sourcing, to craftsmanship, to sustainability efforts that aren’t just greenwashing. GQ Recommends heavily emphasizes our own editorial experience with those brands, how they make their clothes, and how those clothes have been reviewed by customers. Bottom line: GQ wouldn’t tell you to wear it if we wouldn’t.
We make every effort to cast as wide of a net as possible, with an eye on identifying the best options across three key categories: quality, fit, and price.
To kick off the process, we enlist the GQ Recommends braintrust to vote on our contenders. Some of the folks involved have worked in retail, slinging clothes to the masses; others have toiled for small-batch menswear labels; all spend way too much time thinking about what hangs in their closets.
We lean on that collective experience to guide our search, culling a mix of household names, indie favorites, and the artisanal imprints on the bleeding-edge of the genre. Then we narrow down the assortment to the picks that scored the highest across quality, fit, and price.
Across the majority of our buying guides, our team boasts firsthand experience with the bulk of our selects, but a handful are totally new to us. So after several months of intense debate, we tally the votes, collate the anecdotal evidence, and emerge with a list of what we believe to be the absolute best of the category right now, from the tried-and-true stalwarts to the modern disruptors, the affordable beaters to the wildly expensive (but wildly worth-it) designer riffs.
Whatever your preferences, whatever your style, there's bound to be a superlative version on this list for you. (Read more about GQ's testing process here.)
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