Become a Vogue Business Member to receive unlimited access to Member-only reporting and insights, our Beauty and TikTok Trend Trackers, Member-only newsletters and exclusive event invitations.
This article first appeared on Vogue.
If the Milan Fashion Week Men’s calendar looks a little slimmed down, with key labels including Gucci, Fendi and Zegna absent, fear not: Paris is much more robust. Running from 24 June through 29 June and with 70 brands listed — 40 of which will put on runway shows — the line-up for the spring 2026 edition is sure to pack a punch.
The week will once again kick off with the Bachelors of Art show from the outgoing class of the Institut Français de la Mode, with Pharrell Williams and Louis Vuitton, as usual, closing out the first day of shows. Earlier that day, Ryota Iwai is showing his latest for rising label Auralee and Anthony Vaccarello will bring Saint Laurent back to the official calendar. (You may recall that Vaccarello showed his autumn 2025 men’s collection — the one with the thigh-high boots Alexander Skarsgård wore at Cannes earlier this week — on 28 January this year, two days after the men’s collections wrapped and on the second day of haute couture.)
Also returning to the schedule this season are fan favourites Grace Wales Bonner, who took a break from the runway in January but had a fantastic night at the 2025 Met Gala (25 June); Emily Adams Bode Aujla, who was last on the runway in New Orleans for her Super Bowl partnership with GQ (27 June); and Craig Green, who is returning to Paris following the British Fashion Council’s cancellation of its June edition (29 June). Marine Serre, who has moved to the ready-to-wear calendar, will stage a presentation on 27 June.
The Dries Van Noten men’s collection will also return to the runway this season with Julian Klausner’s debut in the category (26 June). Paris Fashion Week Men’s regulars will notice that this is not the typical Dries time slot — the label has switched places with Rick Owens, who will present his collection that evening. Owens’s retrospective, ‘Temple of Love’, opens at the Palais Galliera on 28 June.
Willy Chavarria will return to Paris after a knockout debut in January, his show is scheduled for 27 June. And here’s what you’ve been waiting for: Jonathan Anderson’s much-anticipated debut at Dior Men, the hottest ticket of the menswear season, will take place the same day.
Closing off the week will be Simon Porte Jacquemus, who staged a truly intimate show also on the last day of Paris Men’s back in January — this upcoming season’s formatting and location are yet to be announced. The closing collection last season was Peter Copping’s Lanvin debut; the label is not on this season’s schedule, presumably because it’s returning to the ready-to-wear fold. Unlike the past two seasons, the menswear collections will not directly lead to the haute couture shows. Couture will take place from 7 to 10 July, with Michael Rider’s debut for Celine scheduled for 6 July.
Comments, questions or feedback? Email us at feedback@voguebusiness.com.