The Denim Trends Defining Fall in New York City, According to the Style Set

Take it from the city's It girls.

a collage of woman at New York Fashion Week wearing fall 2025 denim trends
(Image credit: Photographers for Marie Claire)

If I had to pick one denim trend to symbolize summer 2025, it would be the jort. The past few months will be remembered in fashion history as the time when style set stole big, baggy jean shorts from middle-aged dads and made them their own. But after weeks of seeing those salt-of-the-earth shorts on every Manhattan block, at the Marie Claire HQ, and at various fashion events I attended, I'm now noticing early signs of fall 2025’s denim trends.

The city's climate remains more like a humid Everglades swamp, with "feels like" temperatures staying in the high 80s, so denim Bermuda shorts wouldn't be out of place. Yet, stylish New Yorkers would rather spend the rest of August in a pair of slim, almost skinny jeans. (For the uninitiated, brands like Prada, Isabel Marant, and Khaite all showcased straight-leg denim on their Fall 2025 runways.) They prefer low-rise, baggy jeans and dark indigo denim with hems that touch the ground. It's a clear sign: NYC's fashion crowd has moved on from the jort's moment in the sun; now it’s time to determine fall 2025's key denim silhouette.

a woman wearing blue straight-leg denim at new york fashion week

(Image credit: Tyler Joe for Marie Claire)

The jury is still out on exactly which silhouette that'll be, but I guarantee it's one of the four below that I've seen all over NYC, from SoHo to the Upper West Side and downtown Brooklyn. Keep scrolling for a preview and pick your favorite of fall's denim trend by adding one to your fall wardrobe early.

Indigo Denim

Eva Chen wearing dark indigo jeans at new york fashion week

(Image credit: Tyler Joe for Marie Claire)

Without question, the only denim wash you want for this fall is dark blue, almost violet indigo. On my way to work from Brooklyn to midtown Manhattan, one of my fellow subway commuters was wearing a fantastic pair of wide-leg jeans in a shade so dark, the pants were nearly black. I'm personally considering adding Mother's barrel-leg jeans to my rotation, since the tapered silhouette is a consistent favorite among tastemakers.

Low-Rise and Loose

a woman at fashion week wearing blue jeans and a yellow jacket and scarf

(Image credit: Tyler Joe for Marie Claire)

The baggy jeans trend continues, with this fall specifically emphasizing lower rises. Think: just below the belly button—a fit that, yes, might be outside your high-waist comfort zone but remains wearable in a way that the low-slung, hipbone-level bottoms from the early 2000s weren't.

Straight-Leg Jeans

a woman at new york fashion week wearing a yellow blazer and blue straight-leg jeans

(Image credit: Tyler Joe for Marie Claire)

Alternatively, if you've grown tired of the roomy and relaxed look, consider a slimmer, straighter leg. The fit doesn't have to be skin-tight—just make sure the pant legs don't blow in the breeze, and you'll align with fall's straight-leg denim style. I already own Alex Mill's Carla denim trouser (a tried and true capital-H Hero item in my fall rotation), but like the idea of a jet-black pair like Mother's.

Embellished Jeans

a woman at new york fashion week wearing a white round neck sweater and pearl embellished blue jeans

(Image credit: Tyler Joe for Marie Claire)

Just like crows, ravens, and magpies can't resist shiny objects, the fashion crowd can't either. Over the past week, I've seen women wearing denim decorated with crystals, sequins, and pearls. I also love Zara's version of the decorative denim trend that is more about decoration than sparkle: a pair of lighter wash, wide-leg jeans that already feature the It-girl-favorite scarf belt trend.

Emma Childs
Fashion Features Editor

Emma Childs is the fashion features editor at Marie Claire, where she explores the intersection of style and human interest storytelling. She covers viral, zeitgeist-y moments—like TikTok's "Olsen Tuck" and Substack's "Shirt Sandwiches"—and has written hundreds of runway-researched trend reports. Above all, Emma enjoys connecting with real people about style, from picking a designer's brain to speaking with athlete stylists, politicians, and C-suite executives.

Emma previously wrote for The Zoe ReportEditorialistElite Daily, and Bustle and studied Fashion Studies and New Media at Fordham University Lincoln Center. When Emma isn't writing about niche fashion discourse on the internet, you'll find her stalking eBay for designer vintage, doing hot yoga, and "psspsspssp"-ing at bodega cats.