The 2026 Grammy Awards red carpet proved one thing loud and clear: men’s fashion is no longer about playing it safe. This year, tailoring met mystique, classic silhouettes flirted with subversion, and a few men understood the assignment better than anyone else.
Best-Dressed Man: Bad Bunny in Schiaparelli
Bad Bunny once again reminded the industry that he’s not just a global music force — he’s a fashion disruptor. Wearing Schiaparelli, he delivered a couture-level interpretation of the tuxedo, blending old-world elegance with sculptural modernity. Velvet textures, sharp contrasts, and couture detailing transformed a classic black-and-white look into something unmistakably now.


This wasn’t just red-carpet dressing — it was fashion with intention, drama, and cultural weight. A clear winner.

Justin Bieber — Understated, Grown, Intentional
Justin Bieber stepped away from exaggerated proportions and leaned into refined minimalism. His look felt mature, controlled, and quietly luxurious — a reminder that confidence doesn’t always need theatrics. The tailoring was relaxed but precise, signaling a new era of Bieber style: less noise, more authority.

Gesaffelstein — Pure Dark Magnetism
If the Grammys had a fashion phantom, it was Gesaffelstein. Dressed in his signature monochrome palette, the French electronic musician delivered a look that felt somewhere between industrial, cinematic, and untouchably cool. Sharp lines, severe elegance, and an aura that didn’t beg for attention — it commanded it.


In a sea of polished suits, Gesaffelstein stood out by doing less and meaning more.
Trend Watch: What Men’s Fashion Told Us in 2026
- Couture Meets Masculinity: Designers are pushing men beyond standard tuxedos into conceptual territory.
- Dark Elegance: Black isn’t basic — when styled right, it’s powerful, sensual, and timeless.
- Quiet Confidence: Less logos, better tailoring, stronger presence.


Darren Criss — Took risks with textured patterns and embellished tailoring that brought luxe detail to the red carpet.
The Grammys 2026 proved that men’s red-carpet fashion is evolving fast — and those who understand restraint, vision, and individuality are winning. Bad Bunny takes the crown, but Justin Bieber and Gesaffelstein showed that modern masculinity comes in very different — yet equally compelling — forms.

