Gen Z men are rewriting the fashion rulebook and by 2026, those rules may barely exist. For this generation, style is no longer about approval, polish or fitting into a prescribed look. It is about identity. What you wear is less a trend decision and more a reflection of how you feel, live and see yourself.
In an interview with the Times of India, Sai Kiran Vemuri, Founder and CEO at Stylz, shared, “One of the biggest shifts is the rise of personality-led dressing. Gen Z men are choosing outfits that mirror mood and mindset rather than occasion alone. Comfort blends with confidence, and practicality coexists with bold self-expression. The idea of “dressing appropriately” is being replaced by dressing authentically.”
Traditional gender boundaries continue to dissolve. According to fashion trend forecasts, relaxed silhouettes, bold colours and expressive accessories are becoming staples for Gen Z men, blurring once-strict norms around menswear and personal expression.
Vemuri revealed, “In 2026, these choices will feel less like statements and more like everyday normalcy.
Fashion is no longer about being correct; it is about being honest. There is also a noticeable move away from understated luxury toward expressive, layered aesthetics. Y2K references, maximalism, vintage mixes, and statement accessories such as eyewear, watches and headwear are becoming tools of self-definition. These looks are not about attention seeking, but about visibility on one’s own terms.”
Style is increasingly shaped by body type, lifestyle, climate, routine and personal identity rather than trend cycles. Vemuri asserted, “The future of fashion technology lies in understanding people, not prescribing looks. As Gen Z men continue to break fashion rules, one thing is clear: the future of men’s fashion is not about dressing better than others but about dressing closer to yourself. By 2026, authenticity will not be a trend. It will be the baseline.”
Gen Z men are rewriting the rules of jewellery. What was once bought as a gift is now chosen personally, worn daily and expected to keep up with real life. Jewellery is no longer about occasions or ornamentation, it’s about utility, identity and confidence.
Darayus Mehta, Co-Founder of True Diamond, highlighted, “Men want pieces they don’t have to take off for work, travel, or movement. By 2026, men’s jewellery will move further away from tradition and lean into function-first design, individuality, and effortless wearability, made to be lived in, not preserved. This is where titanium jewellery fits in seamlessly. It’s lightweight, resilient, understated, modern, low-maintenance, work-ready, travel-proof, durable, confident and built for everyday life.”

