The bomber jacket has long transcended its utilitarian roots. The jacket’s silhouette looks good on a range of body types, and it’s a versatile garment that can be dressed up or down. They’re warmer, softer and loaded with nuanced details, an all-around improvement over the options pilots were given during WWI.
And like other styles that made their way into the closets of civilians following conflict — like the field jacket, aviator sunglasses and T-shirts — the bomber jacket is now a certified menswear classic that transcends its roots.
Products in the Guide
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Alpha Industries Heritage MA-1 Bomber Jacket
Best Overall Bomber Jacket
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Buck Mason Storm Stopper Bomber Jacket
Best Upgrade Bomber Jacket
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Uniqlo MA-1 Blouson
Best Affordable Bomber Jacket
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Everlane Bomber Jacket
Best Lightweight Bomber Jacket
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Buck Mason Leather Bruiser Bomber
Best Leather Bomber Jacket
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Abercrombie & Fitch Workwear Bomber Jacket
Best Mall Buy Bomber Jacket
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Bonobos The Boulevard Bomber
Best Bomber Jacket for the Office
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MKI Bubble Bomber Jacket
Best Bubble Bomber Jacket
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Flaxton Corduroy Navy Bomber Jacket
Best Non-Traditional Bomber Jacket
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Vollebak Indestructible Jacket
Best Splurge Bomber Jacket
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Taylor Stitch The Bomber Jacket
Best Suede Bomber Jacket
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Lululemon Switch Over Bomber
Best Bomber Jacket for Commuters
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Mr P. Cotton-Drill Bomber Jacket
Best Designer Bomber Jacket
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Bomber Jacket History
Back in the day, the bomber jacket was standard issue for the bold and the cold. Designed to make pilots as comfortable as possible while airborne in non-insulated airplanes, the jackets were available in only two sturdy materials, leather or nylon. But most early bomber jackets — then called flight jackets, even though they’re now two slightly different styles — had high collars, which kept heat from escaping from around your neck.
The high, cinched waist and knit cuffs do similar jobs. Sure, they help define your silhouette, but they also helped pilots sit comfortably, with the bottom of the jacket hitting above their groin and rising above their rear. The knit cuffs let them control the plane without interference, whether they had gloves on or not.
Even today, the bomber jacket is “deeply rooted in the functionality and adaptability required for combat scenarios,” says Matthew Pantoja, the chief brand officer of Alpha Industries, the company that received the first military contract for the production of bomber jackets in the United States