What to wear to the airport — so you don't look like you slept there
The airport is the most-photographed runway you'll ever walk, and most people dress for it like they're in hiding. Throw a leather jacket over the rest and you flip it: you look like you've got your life together at 6am while everyone else looks like a delay. Here's how to travel in one — men and women.
The airport outfit is a quiet test. It has to survive a cramped cabin, a temperature that swings from sweltering gate to freezing aisle seat, hours of sitting, and the off chance someone you know is on your flight.
Most people solve it with sweatpants and surrender. There's a better answer that's just as comfortable and looks ten times sharper — a leather jacket is the single best thing you can pack on your body. Here's why, and how to build the rest of the outfit around it.
Why a leather jacket is the perfect travel layer
It doesn't wrinkle
A blazer comes out of an overhead bin looking like a paper bag. Leather doesn't crease — you can stuff it under the seat, ball it into your bag as a pillow, and it looks exactly the same when you land.
It owns the cabin temperature
Planes are unpredictable. A leather jacket over a tee gives you a layer you can take off when the gate is hot and put back on when the air conditioning kicks in — no bulky coat to wrestle into the bin.
It's a free carry-on
Wear your heaviest layer instead of packing it. The jacket on your back is a bag you don't have to check — and your cabin temperature control in one.
It looks put-together with zero effort
Travel is exhausting and it shows. Leather is the shortcut to looking sharp when you feel anything but — the reason it reads "frequent flyer" instead of "frequent napper."
What to wear to the airport, by trip
Same jacket, different mission. Match it to where you're flying.
The long-haul flight
Comfort is non-negotiable — but comfort and sharp aren't enemies.
A moto or bomber over a soft tee, with relaxed joggers or stretch chinos and clean sneakers. Slip-on shoes for security. Everything breathable; nothing you can't sit in for ten hours.
A cropped moto over a fitted top, with high-waisted leggings or wide-leg trousers and sneakers or low boots. The jacket dresses up the loungewear so you don't feel like you're flying in pyjamas.
Decrum fit: lightweight moto and bomber cuts layer clean for the cabin. Men's moto → · Women's moto →
The early flight
You got up at 4am. Look like you didn't.
Lean on monochrome. A black leather jacket over an all-black or all-neutral base does most of the work — it photographs as "effortless" even when you're running on no sleep. Add sunglasses and you've covered the rest.
The business trip
You're going from gate to meeting, maybe with no time to change.
A clean moto or a structured bomber over a merino tee or fine knit, dark trousers, and leather sneakers or boots. Reads sharp at the gate and holds up in the room.
A tailored moto over a knit or blouse, with straight trousers and boots. Edge over a work base — polished, not stiff.
Decrum fit: structured cuts that work past the terminal. Men's bombers → · Women's bombers →
The weekend getaway
Short trip, one bag, no checked luggage.
The jacket is your anchor piece and it goes with everything you packed — denim by day, dressed up for dinner at night. One leather jacket, a few tees, and a pair of jeans is a whole weekend's wardrobe in a carry-on.
How to nail the airport outfit
Wear your heaviest layer, don't pack it
The jacket on your back is a free carry-on and your cabin temperature control.
Choose breathable bottoms
Joggers, stretch trousers, or leggings — you'll be sitting for hours.
Slip-on or easy shoes
Security is faster and your feet swell on long flights; skip anything tight or hard to remove.
Go monochrome when you're tired
All-black or all-neutral under the jacket photographs as intentional even when you're half-asleep.
Pick a jacket that won't wrinkle or crease
Genuine leather comes out of a bag looking the same as it went in — the whole reason it beats a blazer for travel.
Choosing the right jacket: genuine leather, made for the miles
A travel jacket gets thrown around — bins, seat-backs, bag-pillows, baggage carousels. Faux leather cracks under that life. Genuine leather takes it, breaks in to your body, and ages into something better the more places it goes with you.
That's the Decrum standard: genuine leather, in moto, biker, and bomber cuts that layer clean for a cabin and look sharp at the gate, for men and women. A jacket that earns its place in your carry-on — and outlasts the trip.
Get the fit right with the size & fit guide →, then find your travel jacket.
Airport outfit FAQ
What should you wear to the airport?
A leather jacket over a soft tee, with breathable bottoms (joggers, stretch trousers, or leggings) and slip-on sneakers. It's comfortable enough for a long flight and sharp enough for the gate — for men and women.
Is a leather jacket good for flying?
Yes. It doesn't wrinkle, it layers over a tee for the cabin temperature swing, and wearing it frees up carry-on space. It's one of the best travel layers you can wear.
What's the most comfortable airport outfit?
Soft, breathable basics under a structured layer: tee plus joggers or leggings, with a leather jacket on top and easy shoes. Comfortable for hours of sitting without looking like loungewear.
What shoes are best for the airport?
Slip-on sneakers or low boots. They speed up security and stay comfortable when your feet swell on long flights — avoid anything tight or hard to take off.
How do you look stylish at the airport without trying?
Keep the base monochrome and let a leather jacket be the one statement piece. All-black or all-neutral under leather reads as effortless even on no sleep.
Pack the jacket that looks sharp at every gate.