The 45 Best Men’s Boots to Get You Through Fall and Winter (2024)

Table of Contents
Related Stories R.M. Williams Signature Craftsman Boot Ralph Lauren Purple Label Penfield Chelsea Boot Saint Laurent Wyatt Suede Chelsea Boots Carmina Simpson Boots Gucci Leather Chelsea Boots Wolverine 1000 Mile Plain-Toe Boot Church’s Coalport 2 Leather Derby Boots Common Projects Combat Leather Boots Red Wing Shoes Iron Ranger Boots Dr. Martens Vintage 1460 Boots Diemme Roccia Vet Ankle Boots John Lobb Alder Leather Boots Scarosso Edmund Boots Danner Mountain Light Boot Palladium Pallabrousse Legion Boots Santoni Suede Chukka Boots Tod’s Suede Chukka Boots Tom Ford Robert Suede Chukka Boots Magnanni Malone Chukka Boots Drake’s Clifford Desert Boots Astorflex Greenflex Boots Clarks Desert Boot Sanders Marvin Tobacco Reverse Suede Chukka Boots Todd Snyder Nomad Boots George Cleverley Leather Toby Derby Boots Tricker’s Stow Full-Grain Leather Grain Boots Beckett Simonon Elliot Balmoral Boots Officine Creative Eventual Boots Brunello Cucinelli Paneled Boots Mackage Hero Lug Sole Shearling-Lined Winter Boots L.L. Bean Shearling-Lined Boots Moncler Vancouver Tricolored-Sole Boots Arc’teryx Acrux LT GTX Boots Best Hunting Boots Grenson Easton Boots Yuketen Maine Guide 6 Eye Leather Boots Quoddy RL Camp Boots Sperry Authentic Original Gold Cup Lug Boots Rhodes Tracker Boots Edward Green Camden Chelsea Boot Belstaff Trialmaster Suede Boots Amiri Bandana Strap Ankle Boots Frye Bowery Chelsea Boots Bludstone #585 Boots Authors Eric Twardzik Related Stories References

With foliage turning and flip-flops rightfully banished to their lairs, all signs point to a return to boot-wearing. And how better to mark the return of boot season than to find—and field test—the best boots for men across nine categories, ranging from chukkas and hikers to dress and work boots? After many miles of pavement pounding and more than a few blisters, we’re happy to share the results below.

Related Stories

  • A 40-Minute Tennis Match? How Serena Williams’s Former Coach Is Reinventing the Game
  • Dubai Is Becoming an Important Hub for Serious Watch Collectors. Here’s Why.
  • The 12 Best Presidents' Day Mattress Sales, From Purple to Tempur-Pedic

First, a note on testing: Once we found our top picks, I requested samples from each of the makers. In the instances in which I was permitted to wear the samples outside rather than return them, I subjected each pair to an hour of continuous wear on city streets. In the weeks that followed, many saw additional wear.

As the experience of even the best-made shoes will vary radically based on the user’s feet, I felt I should provide a note on my own. My feet are rather hard to fit, as the right is an 11US on the Brannock Device, while my left is a 12. As a result, I take a 11.5US in sneakers. And while I wear a D width, my feet are wider at the toes. Podiatric particulars aside, here’s the best of what I wore along with a few honorable mentions in each category.

R.M. Williams Signature Craftsman Boot

The 45 Best Men’s Boots to Get You Through Fall and Winter (1)

Considering its Swinging Sixties heritage, the Chelsea is a style of boot that should look sexy. R.M. Williams delivers on that front with a model featuring a raised profile and a long, slightly squared-off toe. It’s as sleek and elegant as a Chelsea comes, which made me fear it’d be a horror on my not-so-sleek feet. However, the boots—which are also remarkably lightweight—proved comfortable from the start, with the only issue being a slight pinch on my left foot that dissipated after 10 minutes (I took their website’s advice and went up a half-size to an 11UK). With wear, I also learned that they could look casually rakish with every outfit.

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $530

Ralph Lauren Purple Label Penfield Chelsea Boot

Buy Now on Ralph Lauren: $1,350

Saint Laurent Wyatt Suede Chelsea Boots

Buy Now on Saks Fifth Avenue: $1,025

Carmina Simpson Boots

Buy Now on Carmina: $570

Gucci Leather Chelsea Boots

Buy Now on Gucci: $1,250

Wolverine 1000 Mile Plain-Toe Boot

Work boots tend to fall into two categories: “heritage” and “heritage-inspired.” In production for more than a century, Wolverine’s 1000 Mile Boot fits squarely into the former category. Out of the box, I was struck by the richness of its Horween Chromexcel leather: It’s beefy but pliant, with an oiliness that made it surprisingly flexible from the first wear. I went down a full size to a 10.5US, which still left plenty of room for thick socks. After about a half-hour they began to pinch around the instep on each foot, though I imagine the leather will soften and expand with wear. A fair amount of their comfort is derived from the boot’s bulbous, reinforced toe, which is far from sexy but feels like a protective dome. It’s what I’d want guarding my toes in the instance of, well, actual work.

Buy Now on Wolverine: $385

Buy Now on Nordstrom: $385

Church’s Coalport 2 Leather Derby Boots

Buy Now on Church's: $1,490

Common Projects Combat Leather Boots

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $740

Red Wing Shoes Iron Ranger Boots

Buy Now on Red Wing: $350

Dr. Martens Vintage 1460 Boots

Buy Now on Todd Snyder: $260

Diemme Roccia Vet Ankle Boots

Hiking boots have trekked from the trailhead to the runway in recent years, and Diemme’s Roccia Vet has a foot in both worlds. It strikes the right balance between rustic and urbane with speed hook eyelets, a heavy treaded sole and a sleek leather upper. That leather is thick yet pliant where it counts, and its padded ankle and inner lining swaddle the foot in soft, insulated comfort. Though I didn’t have the chance to wear it in anything approaching cold weather, I could imagine it keeping my toes toasty through below-freezing temps. The Roccia Vet is not something I, personally, would wear on an actual hike, but I would count on it to take me 30 blocks in a blizzard.

Buy Now on Farfetch: $375

Buy Now on Saks Fifth Avenue: $429

Buy Now on Sneaker Studio: $400

John Lobb Alder Leather Boots

Buy Now on Mytheresa: $2,060

Scarosso Edmund Boots

Buy Now on Scarosso: $435

Danner Mountain Light Boot

Buy Now on Back County: $440

Buy Now on Todd Snyder: $359

Palladium Pallabrousse Legion Boots

Buy Now on Palladium: $200

The chukka is a slippery category to define, but at its most generous includes any ankle-height boot with two-to-three eyelets. They can vary wildly in formality, but Crockett & Jones’s Tetbury is decidedly a dress chukka, distinguished by a waxed calfskin upper and a square, extended toe. My 10.5UK pair felt a bit large at first with thin cotton socks, yet there was a satisfying feeling of suction when I stepped in—this is a boot expertly contoured to the shape of the foot. Though I experienced heel slippage at first, the issue subsided as they broke in. The Tetbury is made on the brand’s 348 last, which allows for an extra inch of space at the toe and took some getting used to but did not impact the overall fit. I also appreciated its thick Dainite sole, which gives it a “town and country” feeling without detracting from its dressy appeal.

Buy Now on Todd Snyder: $695

Buy Now on Crockett & Jones: $695

Santoni Suede Chukka Boots

Buy Now on Bergdorf Goodman: $680

Tod’s Suede Chukka Boots

Buy Now on Tod's: $675

Tom Ford Robert Suede Chukka Boots

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $1,190

Magnanni Malone Chukka Boots

Buy Now on Neiman Marcus: $398

Drake’s Clifford Desert Boots

Desert boots are best understood as a sub-genre of the chukka, with two distinct characteristics: a lower, two-eyelet profile and a crepe sole. The standard model of the Drake’s Clifford boot fulfills both criteria, but the company also makes a roughout suede version with a Dainite-esque rubber sole. I was attracted to this rule-breaking variant, as crepe soles can wear out quickly and can’t be replaced—an issue that felled the several pairs of Clark’s Desert Boots I wore in college. This Clifford’s roughout suede proved exceptionally beautiful in-person, with a warm hue and a velvety texture. That buttery suede, combined with the boot’s unlined construction, provided soft comfort from the start, even if the left in a 10.5UK felt snug at first and blistered after a full day of wear (afterward, I wore them at home for a few hours with thick socks to expand the fit, which seemed to do the trick). I particularly enjoyed how their profile, which is similar to but lower than the Astorflex Greenflex, complemented cuffed trousers and tailoring.

Buy Now on Drake's: $339

Buy Now on End Clothing: $419

Astorflex Greenflex Boots

Buy Now on Huckberry: $195

Clarks Desert Boot

Buy Now on Clarks: $150

Sanders Marvin Tobacco Reverse Suede Chukka Boots

Buy Now on Sanders: $184

Todd Snyder Nomad Boots

Buy Now on Todd Snyder: $248

George Cleverley Leather Toby Derby Boots

With a tall shaft and a pebble-grained upper, Cleverley’s Toby boot is built like a tank but looks like a dress shoe. With a more sculpted shape, I found it snug in a 10.5 UK with cotton boot socks but fine with thin dress socks—appropriate, considering its dress boot status. It broke in more comfortably than your average pair of dress shoes, and I appreciated the extra space provided by its squared-off toe. And while similar in appearance to cordovan, the cavalry calf was less stiff around the edges but did form rolling, cordovan-like creases after an hour’s walk (a positive in my book). Extra points were awarded for its Dainite sole, which delivered great grip from the offset but appears like a formal leather sole from all sides.

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $890

Tricker’s Stow Full-Grain Leather Grain Boots

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $640

Beckett Simonon Elliot Balmoral Boots

Buy Now on Beckett Simonon: 400 $239

Officine Creative Eventual Boots

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $750

Brunello Cucinelli Paneled Boots

There are winter boots made for sloshing through half-melted snowbanks with impunity—like shearling-lined L.L. Bean boots—and winter boots made to keep you warm while looking good. Cucinelli’s padded ankle boots are in the latter grouping and fulfill both its aims. While I wouldn’t stick them ankle-deep into slush, I would wear them under grey flannels and a topcoat in 20-degree weather. In a 44.5 they felt comfortably snug with thick socks, and the felt fabric padding at the ankles provided welcome—and warm—cushioning.

Buy Now on Ssense: $1,495

Mackage Hero Lug Sole Shearling-Lined Winter Boots

Buy Now on Saks Fifth Avenue: $650

L.L. Bean Shearling-Lined Boots

Buy Now on L.L.Bean: $269

Moncler Vancouver Tricolored-Sole Boots

Buy Now on Saks Fifth Avenue: $790

Arc’teryx Acrux LT GTX Boots

Buy Now on Arc’teryx: $400

Best Hunting Boots

Grenson Easton Boots

Hunting boots are loosely defined as mid-height boots with a moccasin-stitched toe. Though readily identified with made-in-Maine brands like Quoddy or Yuketen, Grenson makes a bang-up number in Northampton. Their Easton is crafted from a soft and flexible natural grain leather that feels broken-in from the first step and is attached to a chunky rubber commando sole that suits it to concrete despite its campground looks. While their sizing guide advised going up half a size, I wish I’d stuck with my true 11.5—its round apron toe felt particularly roomy, even with thicker socks.

Buy Now on End Clothing: 375 $199

Yuketen Maine Guide 6 Eye Leather Boots

Buy Now on Mr Porter: $685

Quoddy RL Camp Boots

The 45 Best Men’s Boots to Get You Through Fall and Winter (38)

Buy Now on Quoddy: $425

Sperry Authentic Original Gold Cup Lug Boots

Buy Now on J.Crew: $185

Rhodes Tracker Boots

Buy Now on Rhodes: $198

Edward Green Camden Chelsea Boot

The 45 Best Men’s Boots to Get You Through Fall and Winter (41)

This last category is intentionally vague, meant to net Chelsea boots, jodhpurs, traditional moto boots and more, unified by a single factor: a low ankle-height (and perhaps, the ability to envision them being worn by Steve McQueen). Amid this diverse field, Edward Green’s Camden Chelsea boot emerged as a star. It’s made from Utah delapré, a waxed French leather with a crinkled pattern that broke into endearing wrinkles with wear. The leather was exceptionally soft, resulting in what may have been the easiest break-in process I’ve ever experienced. My 11UK truly fit like a glove—firm enough to prevent any slippage, yet with plenty of give—and had a remarkable lightness that should make it an ideal travel boot. While casual by nature, the slimness of its rubber sole added enough dress appeal to match with suits.

Buy Now on Edward Green: $1,660

Belstaff Trialmaster Suede Boots

Buy Now on Belstaff: $395

Amiri Bandana Strap Ankle Boots

Buy Now on Nordstrom: $1,390

Frye Bowery Chelsea Boots

Buy Now on Frye: $328

Bludstone #585 Boots

Buy Now on Huckberry: $220

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Robb Report may receive an affiliate commission.

Authors

  • The 45 Best Men’s Boots to Get You Through Fall and Winter (46)

    Eric Twardzik

    Eric Twardzik is a Boston-based freelance writer with a passion for classic menswear and classic co*cktails. He has a deep reverence for things that get better with age, such as tweed jackets and…

    Read More

Related Stories

  • A 40-Minute Tennis Match? How Serena Williams’s Former Coach Is Reinventing the Game
  • Dubai Is Becoming an Important Hub for Serious Watch Collectors. Here’s Why.
  • The 12 Best Presidents' Day Mattress Sales, From Purple to Tempur-Pedic
The 45 Best Men’s Boots to Get You Through Fall and Winter (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Prof. An Powlowski

Last Updated:

Views: 6270

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Prof. An Powlowski

Birthday: 1992-09-29

Address: Apt. 994 8891 Orval Hill, Brittnyburgh, AZ 41023-0398

Phone: +26417467956738

Job: District Marketing Strategist

Hobby: Embroidery, Bodybuilding, Motor sports, Amateur radio, Wood carving, Whittling, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Prof. An Powlowski, I am a charming, helpful, attractive, good, graceful, thoughtful, vast person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.