Men's Clothing

Our Men’s Clothing category brings together current partner listings grouped by how items are typically worn and sized, reflecting the way partner feeds label products differently. You’ll see clear splits between tops, bottoms, outerwear and occasion pieces, with further breaks by fit such as slim, regular and relaxed, and size runs that can vary between colourways. Some ranges publish numeric waist and leg lengths while others rely on S–XXL sizing, and the same garment may appear more than once where partners describe it differently, for example as an overshirt or a light jacket. Fabric details sit side by side too, from cotton jerseys and wool blends to technical shells, with stock and colour availability shifting as partner catalogues refresh.

Mens Clothing: what to check across partner listings

Sizing, fits and the way partners label them

Fit names don’t always match between retailers, even when the cut is similar. One listing may call a tee “boxy” while another uses “relaxed”, and trousers can switch between “tapered” and “slim” depending on the feed. Some products show chest measurements in inches; others only show S–XXL. That mismatch is common. When we look at mens fashion listings side by side, the most reliable anchors are garment measurements, fabric stretch notes, and whether a style is sold as “tall”, “short” or “big”. ASOS often includes extra fit notes, while other partners may only publish a size range and colour. Colour-specific sizing gaps happen a lot.

Everyday tops: tees, polos, shirts and overshirts

This section tends to rotate fastest, especially basics in white, black and grey where multiple partners publish near-identical names. You’ll see cotton jerseys, pique polos, brushed flannels and heavier overshirts that sit between shirt and jacket. Some feeds separate “casual shirt” from “smart shirt”; others don’t. It gets messy. For mens casual wear, check collar type, cuff finish, and whether the fabric is pre-washed or labelled “easy iron” because those details can be missing from shorter listings. Fred Perry polos are usually easy to spot by trim details, but similar styles may appear without close-up images elsewhere.

Bottoms: jeans, chinos, cargos and tailored trousers

Partner listings split bottoms in different ways: some push everything into “trousers”, while others keep jeans, chinos and cargos separate. Waist and leg formats vary too—W30/L32 might sit next to “Medium Regular” for a comparable fit. Expect gaps. For mens outfits planning, the practical checks are rise (low/mid/high), leg shape (straight/tapered/wide), and pocket layout, especially on cargos where “utility” can mean anything from two extra pockets to a full flap-pocket build. River Island listings often show multiple angles, but other partners may only show a front view, making fabric weight harder to judge.

Outerwear and layers that overlap categories

Coats, jackets, gilets and knit layers can overlap because partners tag them differently, and seasonality changes what gets pushed into this page. A quilted “liner jacket” might appear under outerwear in one feed and under knitwear in another. It shifts weekly. Watch for fill type (down, synthetic, unfilled shell), lining notes, and whether a hood is detachable—those details affect warmth more than the product name. Superdry pieces often include clear fabric and lining callouts, while some partners only publish a generic “padded” description. Sizes can drop out quickly on heavier coats, especially in darker colourways.

Smart pieces: tailoring, work shirts and occasion wear

Smart items are where inconsistent naming causes the most confusion: “blazer”, “suit jacket” and “formal jacket” can point to similar cuts, but the construction details differ. Don’t assume. Look for whether trousers are sold separately, whether the jacket is fully lined, and whether fabric is marked as wool blend, polyester blend, or stretch. For mens smart clothing, lapel style and button stance can change the look more than colour. Hugo Boss tailoring listings often include fabric composition and lining notes, while shorter feeds may omit both, which makes comparing like-for-like harder. Availability is patchy across sizes, especially long and short fits.

Comparing listings on our channel: what changes and why

Because products come from multiple partner retailers, you’ll see differences in image sets, naming, and even which variants are published at all. Some partners upload every colour as a separate product; others keep colours under one listing, so “navy” can look like a separate item next to “blue”. It’s not consistent. When we come back to this section after short gaps, the biggest changes are size availability and the sudden appearance of new-season drops that push older lines down the page. We also show whether a retailer currently has voucher codes available, but the product comparison still comes down to fit, fabric and variant detail. Separately, Discount Promo Codes donates 20% of profits each month to charity.