These 6 Summer 2026 Dress Trends Are the Only Ones That Matter
They're easy, breezy, and—most importantly—will make your life a lot less complicated on 90-degree days.
Much ink has been spilled about the appeal of a great summer dress. As days get warmer and winter is but a distant memory, it feels right to celebrate in a garment that liberates your legs—and streamlines getting dressed so you can get outside as soon as possible. Designers are well aware of how the season’s carefree spirit impacts what you want to wear, which is why Summer 2026’s top dress trends all have a shared theme: styles that are easy, breezy, and make your life a lot less complicated.
Using the Pre-Fall 2026 collections as a reference, the laissez-faire attitude was most evident in silhouette. (Think: sculptural necklines and sleek cuts that do a lot with a little.) There was also an appreciation for artisan-led details, as seen in romantic lace, cutwork embroidery, and strategic smocking that created shape and gave pieces personality. Concurrently, the aesthetic pendulum swung toward minimalism again; save for splashes of stripes, gingham, and florals here and there, the overall look of this summer's dresses is uncontroversial, inoffensive, and neutral in color palette.
From neutral linen maxis to throw-on for last-minute farmer’s market runs to lace-trimmed slips you can dress up with the right heel if need be, this summer’s dresses encourage spending as little time as possible getting ready and as much as you can out enjoying the sunshine. Keep scrolling for a bigger—and shoppable—breakdown on the specific soon-to-be-everywhere dress trends of Summer '26.
Little White Dresses
Staud, Victoria Beckham, Khaite, Ferragamo, Christopher Esber, Alberta Ferretti, Cecilie Bahnsen, Dior, TWP, and Elisabetta Franchi
Designers at Dior, Khaite, Victoria Beckham, and more found a warm-weather answer to the LBD—which, on a 90-degree-plus day, will bake you like an oven—a little white one. Think of it as the same dress, just in a different font (color). As in, aside from a lone cutout or ruched side panel, the silhouettes remain simplistic, and the versatile piece can be dressed up or down, depending on your calendar.
Smocked Dresses
McQueen, Ganni, Emilia Wickstead, and Cecilie Bahnsen
Smocked dresses have been having their well-deserved moment in the mainstream for a few years now, fueled by celebrities like Taylor Swift, who loves options from Dôen, and Scandi brands like Ganni, which have made the gathered-fabric technique a signature of their quirky-cool designs. Breaking from the monochrome norm of past seasons, this summer's smocked dresses are rendered in plenty of prints, including picnic-ready gingham and garden florals.
Lace-Trimmed Slip Dresses
Chloé, Chanel, Dior, Maria McManus, Ermanno Scervino, Self-Portrait, Carven, Simkhai, Valentino, and Stella McCartney
Lingerie-adjacent but destined for more than just the boudoir, lace-trimmed dresses are one of the easiest ways to add romance and a delicate touch to your summer wardrobe. You'll notice that some of the lacy slip dresses from the Pre-Fall 2026 collections fell into a traditional '90s-inspired category (Dior, Maria McManus, etc.), while others looked back at the boho energy of the '70s via ruffles and sweet puff sleeves (Chloé, Self-Portrait).
Elevated-Neckline Dresses
Dior, Rachel Comey, Christopher Esber, Erdem, Khaite, Alberta Ferretti
The difference between a basic dress and a vastly more interesting style often comes down to one subtle yet strategic tweak. This summer, it was most evident in the slew of asymmetrical and unexpected necklines. Designers like Dior, Khaite, and Rachel Comey used the décolletage as their playground, showing off-the-shoulder slips, fallen-strap cocktail dresses, and evening gowns with bodices that cut across the collarbones.
Easy Tank Dresses
Ferragamo, Kallmeyer, Maria McManus, Staud, Khaite, and Officine Générale
They're simple in silhouette, but don't mistake their humble design for a lack of intrigue—the best tank dresses speak to a less-is-more philosophy that loyal minimalists know well and always wax poetic about. Whether you opt for a breezy linen maxi (like Kallmeyer's), which pairs well with thong sandals for casual Sundays, or a cropped tunic (like Staud's) to wear over pants, the exact cut and material are up to you. All that matters with this type of summer dress is that it boasts two easy-to-wear straps and is as comfortable as the tank tops you wear nonstop in August.
Broderie Anglaise Dresses
Ganni, Veronica Beard, Ulla Johnson, Sea, and Carolina Herrera
If you don't know broderie anglaise by name, you know it from its hole-punched look. The technique involves cutwork embroidery, where the base fabric is punched with ornamental holes, and the edges of those cuts are sewn over to create a raised, lace-like look. The detail was popularized in England’s Victorian Era—the term literally translates as “English embroidery” in French—on undergarments, home linens, and baby clothes. But now, as an essential Summer 2026 dress trend, you'll find it in babydoll mini dresses, wrap dresses you can wear to work, and beach cover-ups.
Why Trust Us
Emma Childs is Marie Claire’s fashion features editor with almost a decade of experience in the fashion industry. She focuses on in-depth trend reports and stories covering the intersection of style and human-interest storytelling. She analyzed hundreds of Pre-Fall 2026 runway shows to compile this breakdown of the season's top trends.
For more than 30 years, Marie Claire has been an internationally recognized destination for news, fashion, and beauty trends, investigative packages, and more. When it comes to the products Marie Claire recommends, we take your faith in us seriously. Every product that we feature comes personally recommended by a Marie Claire writer or editor, or by an expert we’ve spoken to firsthand
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Emma Childs is the fashion features editor at Marie Claire, where she explores the intersection of style, culture, and human interest storytelling. She covers zeitgeist-y style 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 designers, athlete stylists, politicians, and C-suite executives.
Emma previously wrote for The Zoe Report, Editorialist, Elite Daily, and Bustle, and she 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 shopping designer vintage, doing hot yoga, and befriending bodega cats.