Image

The 39-ish Most Stylish People of 2026, So Far

Our list of stylish people is not merely an appreciation of really great clothes, though there are plenty of those below. It is also a snapshot of pop culture, viral moments and figures who commanded the public’s attention (and dressed the part).

Some ignited discourse, and discord, with a single look. Others used fashion to manifest some element of their identity — think John Travolta and his berets, a tribute to his notion of what a director should look like — or as an exuberant expression of their personality. Who but Björk, for instance, could be seen wearing a fiberglass-fringed Pepto Bismol-pink Bottega Veneta ensemble behind a D.J. booth?

The great fashion writer Kennedy Fraser once argued that style, and stylishness, differed from ideas like taste and elegance. Taste, she wrote, “never makes mistakes.” Elegance is “static and hermetic.” Style, though, is a moving target; it is also “individualistic” and “reckless,” she said. That’s how you get both the singer Jack Harlow’s toque-like hat and the director Chloé Zhao’s regal red dress paired with pigtails. They may not be for you, but that’s the point. — Marie Solis, senior staff editor


Few but Reinsve have the range to pull off both a statuesque gown and a louche suit. This one was borrowed right off the back of Stellan Skarsgard, the actress’s fictional father in the film “Sentimental Value.”


This Puerto Rican musician’s Super Bowl performance became a political flashpoint. As our men’s wear critic Jacob Gallagher put it in February, Bad Bunny’s all-cream look suggested an “above-it-all poise, an image orchestrated to counter critics.” The crew members who moved the sets during the performance did so covered in reeds of grass, adding an artistic flourish.


When Colbert ended his 11-season run in May, he said farewell in — what else? — a single-breasted dark navy suit, the uniform of late-night hosts who for decades have lent a sense of decorum to their craft with versions of this understated look.


On the Golden Globes red carpet and elsewhere, this trio proved that girl group dressing has come a long way since Destiny’s Child. Nuna was particularly striking in Thom Browne.


How do you dress a 7-foot-4 figure? Not many people confront this dilemma, but should you ever find yourself in a bind, consider this San Antonio Spurs player’s tunnel-walk ’fits, which take a relaxed but cerebral approach to the brief. Please note that he is also clutching a book; we sure did.

Avant-garde to her core, it’s difficult not to be totally delighted by this singer’s appearance behind a D.J. booth at the Venice Biennale, undulating in a Dr. Seussian fall 2026 look by Louise Trotter’s Bottega Veneta.


That the Nike tracksuit worn by the Venezuelan president at the time of his capture — an image shared by President Trump on Truth Social — became an instant meme demonstrated how quickly the internet collapses historic moments into ironic cultural ephemera.


The jumpsuits the astronauts wore in space were in International Orange, custom-made to each astronaut’s physique and designed to sustain their wearer for 144 hours. Once they landed safely, it was fitting that they celebrated their return with jumpsuits in this almost drinkable shade of blue.


The key to wearing a serpentine gown just barely brushing one’s breast and a shaggy tinsel confection requiring constant movement? Supreme confidence.


Palpable joy is as much part of this figure skater’s look as her signature striped hair.

Modeling his talk show on Dick Cavett’s, Friedland pays homage to the semiotics of the form. But one never forgets his intent to subvert those tropes — down to wearing cowboy boots, which he pairs with his raffish suits.


In the Ryan Murphy FX series “Love Story,” Pidgeon appears in an array of faithfully reproduced looks worn by the real-life Carolyn Bessette Kennedy — Calvin Klein, Yohji Yamamoto, Prada. Off duty, the breakout star still channels a bit of that ’90s minimalism but reinterprets it her way.


Once you noticed one, you saw them everywhere. Most were poor imitators, who eschewed the Kennedy son’s more idiosyncratic choices in favor of a generic preppy aesthetic — on display here, in an Instagram post from Uniqlo — that was trending long before “Love Story.”


Is there anything the health secretary won’t do in jeans? In a bid to project the White House’s vision of masculinity, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. shared a video of himself doing bicep curls, riding a stationary bike and even cold-plunging — all in denim.


The first lady of New York’s lace-up boots from Miista, borrowed for her husband’s midnight swearing-in as mayor, became an instant, and very 2026, Rorschach test.

The eldest daughter of the Knowles-Carter family, Blue Ivy Carter, has been in the public eye since she was born. But on the Met Gala red carpet in an off-white gown by Pierpaolo Piccioli for Balenciaga, it was clear that Carter was not merely the child of stars but a star in her own right.


It’s a potent image for an administration that has made clear its position that women should be having more children. These three women — Usha Vance, Katie Miller and Karoline Leavitt — create a portrait of idealized femininity, the counterpart to the masculine bravado put forth by the men of White House.


This Yankees player reiterated the totemic power of clothes when he borrowed his much larger teammate Giancarlo Stanton’s uniform to break his batting slump. Incidentally, the oversize pants — Stanton is about 6-foot-5, and Chisholm is 5-foot-11 — happen to have exactly the right amount of slouch for the moment.


Still a relatively new face in Hollywood, Infiniti’s red carpet looks this season felt fresh and bold. And never was she to be seen in the same silhouette twice.


With his unflashy, intelligent way of dressing while promoting his latest book, “London Falling,” Keefe, the consummate investigative journalist, conveys both the gravitas and the honest demeanor one must possess to convince people to share their stories.

The sharp contrast between the brick-red dress, the crisp white shoe and the dark sunglasses is perfectly offset by the director’s insouciant pigtails.


He walked in more than one fashion show this year, but this viral “looksmaxxer,” who goes to extremes to sculpt his face and body to his standards of perfection, would be the first to tell you that the clothes don’t make the man.


The Oscar-nominated costume designer Bellizzi, who sourced and styled the period clothing for “Marty Supreme,” returned to the archives for this 1999 Galliano-era Dior gown.


Streep melded her image with her character Miranda Priestly’s for the “Devil Wears Prada 2” press tour. But it wasn’t just the series of perfectly shaped sunglasses that made these looks indelible; smart silhouettes, bold prints and luxe textures made Streep the picture of elegance and glamour.

Perhaps none have been more committed to the image they created for themselves than this British rapper, who is never seen without a face covering.


When he wore these mirrored aviator shades to address the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January, it seemed the accessory was meant to cover an inflamed eye. Yet it was unavoidable that the glasses would make a fashion statement, too.


She’s a model, a Stanford University graduate and an Olympic gold medalist several times over. The ribbon she often wears in her hair shows that Gu, one of the most decorated multi-hyphenates, has a playful side.


Whatever else happens this year, we’ve already been blessed with a new form of hat. This far into human existence, who knew such a thing was possible?


Clothes can be a tool to express the most straightforward of sentiments. During his 31-game streak on “Jeopardy!,” Ding wanted to rep the colors of his alma mater, Princeton, and so he did, resulting in a string of winsome sweaters riffing on the color palette.


This rising rapper from Essex, England, who has been boosted by Drake and Playboi Carti, has also become a clothes hound. He covets garments by Galliano, he walked in Demna’s Gucci debut and he is undaunted by style risks, like bedazzled jeans.

In another sign that Jonathan Anderson is making waves at Dior, Rosalía collaborated with the designer on her celestial onstage looks, which were a little bit “Black Swan,” a little bit Michelangelo.


His internet talk show, “Subway Takes,” has become an almost required stop for celebrities macro and micro. Rahma’s array of sunglasses, always worn inside on the train, are essential to the job.


Upon his directorial debut at Cannes Film Festival in the spring, Travolta said he wanted to look like the “old-school directors.” The berets he wore to play the part paired well with his jaunty demeanor, which seemed to convey that he, too, was surprised he had pulled it off.


Seen through the lens of Katy Perry’s social media presence, this former prime minister of Canada looks like just another Instagram boyfriend.


This Hungarian health minister’s pure lack of inhibition — after Hungary’s new prime minister ousted Viktor Orbán in the spring — is a rare thing, and infectious.

First, he was a Loewe boy; now he’s a Dior lad. This actor, and his new stylist Jason Bolden, knows he looks good in Jonathan Anderson’s designs, worn of late to promote “Disclosure Day.”


These satiny lavender boxer shorts with delicate crystal patches refracted the facets of Bieber’s public persona of late: both a singer with a troubled past trying to cut a more tender image and a savvy businessman, as the shorts were from his own brand, Skylrk.


With her Golden Globe-winning podcast, she’s become celebrities’ favorite celebrity. Her cheery, mom-core tops, typically all that you see when she’s behind the mic, help put her guests at ease.


This Brooklyn assemblyman has his own notion of what a democratic socialist legislator should look like. His look is inflected with his work history — as a Bergdorf Goodman sales associate on the women’s floor at the Row.


Stella Bugbee and Jacob Gallagher contributed reporting.

SHARE THIS POST