

Boots and blankets, sure, but also aviators, ballcaps, and cologne, across every price point, from factories and workshops in twenty-six states.
Your neighbors still make incredible stuff.
America turns 250 this year, which is as good an excuse as we’ll ever get to celebrate the people still making things here. Some never stopped: Round House has been sewing jeans in Shawnee, Oklahoma since 1903 and still charges about seventy bucks. Some are picking the thread back up: a 150-year-old Pennsylvania knitting mill is running again with the same knitters at the same machines, and Thorogood just cut the ribbon on a $14.5 million boot factory in Wisconsin. And before you assume it’s all $400 heirloom territory, there are North Carolina-knit socks in here for the price of a sandwich.
Longtime readers know the Primer playbook: buy the great $30 chino, and spend up when you can on the things that matter to you. Consider this the master list for the second half of that sentence: brands in more than half the states of the union, at every price point, all making real products in America right now.
What’s below is leather jackets from New Jersey, boots from Maine and Minnesota, merino from Montana, ties from Vermont, sandals from Hawaii, and boardshorts from the same Santa Ana floor since 1961.
People a few towns over from you, absurdly good at their jobs, still at it, in more places than you’d guess.
There is pride in that.
And that is worth wearing.
How to Read This List
One quick note on what “American-made” actually means in practice, because it’s not one thing. A few brands do it all here, fiber to finished garment. That’s rare and deserves a shout. Most US makers cut and sew here from imported fabric, often the best Japanese denim or Italian wool in the world. That’s been the standard for a century and nothing to apologize for. And for sneakers, eyewear, and watches, “assembled in America” from global components is usually as domestic as the category gets.
We’re not grading anybody on a purity scale. Keeping real production in this country in 2026 is hard and expensive, and every company below is doing it. We checked against live product pages, and where a company makes some things here and some things abroad, each entry says which is which.
Coast to Coast
Where It’s Made
Pinned where they make it or call home, across twenty-six states. A few brands sew at undisclosed US partner factories and sit at their home base.


The Field Guide
All Brands, A–Z
Filter by product type and price tier; every entry stays on the page.
Shop for
Price
Showing 80 of 80 brands


Denim
San Francisco (sewn) / NYC (brand), CA
$$$Denim from $230; jeans $250–310
The NYC denim label’s jeans are cut and sewn in San Francisco at Skyblue Sewing Manufacturing from selvedge denim custom-woven for them by Japan’s Kuroki Mills, and every jean on their site carries a “Made in USA” designation. The denim is the American-made line, and the reason to be here anyway; the rest of the catalog is made elsewhere.
Denim is the US-made line; non-denim categories are imported (Canada and elsewhere)
Our pick — CT-100x Classic Tapered in Indigo Selvedge, $270 (opens in a new tab)


Noragi jackets
SF Bay Area, CA
$$Tees $49; noragi $139–169
The Japanese-American brand that made the noragi (Japan’s centuries-old workwear jacket) a menswear staple, sewing them in the USA from premium Japanese fabrics. Founded by a fifth-generation Japanese American in the Bay Area, and at $139–$169 it’s one of the most distinctive US-made layers you can own. (Their tees and hoodies are US-made too; some specialty knitwear isn’t.)
Noragi/tees/hoodies US-sewn of Japanese fabric; some knitwear abroad
Our pick — Noragi Jacket in Army Green Wave, $149 (opens in a new tab)


Footwear
Middleborough, MA · Est. 1884
$$$$From ~$620; Indy Boot $730
The last of the original New England dress shoe factories, family-owned since 1884 and still building every shoe in Middleborough, Massachusetts. The Indy boot (Indiana Jones’s boot, genuinely) is the icon, and their shell cordovan loafers are grail-tier. Prices have climbed north of $600, which stings, but nothing on this list is more buy-once-cry-once.
Our pick — Alden 403 Indy Boot in Brown Chromexcel, $730 (opens in a new tab)


Jeans & tees
Los Angeles (production), CA
$$LA-made jeans $195–225; Mercer tees $24–48
Alex Mill got into denim in 2024 and did it the right way: every pair is sewn in Los Angeles at a low-waste factory where each jean passes through thirty-some specialists, one for every step, and 98 percent of the production waste gets reused. The AM Original 5-Pocket is the one to know, a 15-ounce non-stretch jean built to channel the vintage stuff, and the garment-dyed Mercer tees come out of LA too. The broader catalog is imported; the denim and tees are the American-made line.
Denim program (launched 2024) + Mercer tees are LA-made; broader catalog imported
Our pick — AM Original 5-Pocket Jean in Authentic Vintage, $225 (opens in a new tab)


Jeans & workwear
Arcanum, OH
$Tees from $12; jeans $68.95–79.95
The budget anchor of American denim, out of Arcanum, Ohio. Jeans are cut, sewn, and washed in Illinois, California, Texas, and Kentucky for under $80. Workwear-straight fits, honest prices, zero pretense.
Our pick — Classic Jean, $79.95 (opens in a new tab)


Dress shoes
Port Washington, WI · Est. 1922
$$$$450 regular; frequently around $300 on sale
Still handcrafting its core Goodyear-welted dress shoes in Port Washington, Wisconsin, a 212-step process, and the recrafting program means one pair can serve you for decades. Know the fine print: uppers are stitched in the Dominican Republic before Wisconsin assembly, and the newer sneakers and casual styles are imported. The classic welted line (Park Avenue, Strand) remains the real deal, and the new US-made Reserve Collection shows they’re leaning back into it.
Core welted dress line US-made (DR-stitched uppers); sneakers/casuals imported
Our pick — Park Avenue Cap-Toe Oxford, $450 (frequently ~$349 on sale) (opens in a new tab)


Blankets
Amana, IA · Est. 1857
$$Cotton throws from $120; bed blankets $175
Iowa’s only working woolen mill has been weaving in the same brick building in the Amana Colonies since 1857. The cotton bed blankets and wool throws are made start to finish on site, “proudly made in Amana, Iowa, USA,” and small-batch enough that colorways genuinely sell out. If the one you want is gone, check back. The looms are still running.
Our pick — Herringbone Cotton Throw, $120 (opens in a new tab)


Sweats & basics
San Francisco (HQ); NC + LA factories · Est. 2011
$$Tees ~$55; hoodie $168
Still the gold standard. Cotton grown in Georgia, Florida, and North Carolina; spun, knit, and dyed at American mills; cut and sewn in North Carolina and Los Angeles. One million hoodies later, the “greatest hoodie ever made” got a full relaunch in December 2025: softer fleece, same fully domestic supply chain, which also means they sailed through the tariff era untouched.
Our pick — Classic Full Zip Hoodie, $168 (opens in a new tab)


Eyewear
Vernon Hills, IL · Est. 1833
$$$From $210; Original Pilot $250–345
One of the two great American military eyewear houses, and the one whose Original Pilot went to the moon on Apollo 11. Frames are now built at a state-of-the-art Illinois factory (billed as the largest eyewear plant in the country) from globally sourced components. Prices have climbed to $250+, but so has the build quality, and so has the ambition, as AO remakes itself from a mil-surplus utility name into a heritage brand with real charisma.
US-built frames from globally sourced components
Our pick — Original Pilot Sunglasses, from $250 (opens in a new tab)


Outerwear & socks
Ardmore, PA (HQ; sewn in Boston & NY)
$$$$Trench coat $925, US-made outerwear; socks from $15
What started as one perfect trench coat out of Ardmore, Pennsylvania is now a full American-made outfitter: coats assembled in Boston, socks knit in the Carolinas and Pennsylvania, and a new American Blazer whose wool goes from Oregon sheep to a Queens tailoring floor without leaving the country. One of the very few brands where “US-manufactured unless otherwise noted” is the default.
US-manufactured by default; some imported fabrics (Ventile), disclosed
Our pick — US-made merino socks, ~$32 (opens in a new tab). And if your timing is right, The American Trench Coat 2.0 in Ventile, $925 (opens in a new tab), which sells out nearly every run


Neckwear
Middlebury, VT · Est. 1993
$Bows $48; ties $72–88
Handcrafting bow ties, neckties, and pocket squares in Middlebury, Vermont since 1993, the largest genuinely American tie operation still standing, at prices ($48 bows, $72–$88 ties) that undercut the imported designer stuff.


Axes & heritage goods
New York (jackets NYC; axe forged in Indiana) · Est. 2009
$$$US-made jackets $398–428; cap $68; Optimist axe $450
One of menswear’s great resurrection stories: founder Peter Buchanan-Smith sold Best Made in 2016, watched it fade under new owners, and bought it back in 2023 to relaunch it himself. The hero products are genuinely American again: US-made jackets, Kentucky-sewn pants, and the Optimist axe forged in New Castle, Indiana. Not everything is, though. Check the label piece by piece, since the tees and workshirts are made in Peru and Portugal.
Axes forged in Indiana; select US apparel; tees/workshirts Peru/Portugal
Our pick — Service Jacket in Olive, $428 (opens in a new tab)


Chinos
Beacon Falls, CT (HQ; sewn at US partners) · Est. 1990
$$$248
The great American khaki survived its own near-death experience: after the original company collapsed in 2015, new ownership revived it, and the M-series twills are once again cut and sewn in the USA. Fuller, honest fits built off WWII-era patterns: the anti-skinny-chino. (Bonus trivia for the faithful: founder Bill Thomas is back with a new US-made khaki brand, PennBilt (opens in a new tab), that’s worth a look too.)
Our pick — Original Twill Classic Fit M2, $248 (opens in a new tab)


Leather goods
Jersey City (PA Amish-cut), NJ · Est. 1999
$$Belts ~$125; wallets $175–195
Twenty-six years in, the Bray brothers’ leather goods are still cut by Amish craftsmen in Pennsylvania and finished at their Jersey City studio: wallets, belts, and bags with the kind of simple, over-built construction that reads vintage the day you buy it. They’ve been appearing in our gift guides and interior home pieces for over a decade, and my Change is Good leather tray still sits on my bedside table.
Our pick — Their leather belts, from ~$125 (opens in a new tab)


Boardshorts
Santa Ana, CA · Est. 1961
$$Boardshorts $125–160; US-made tees from $26
Birdwell has been handmaking its nylon boardshorts in Santa Ana, California since 1961, right down to the SurfNyl fabric, which is milled and dyed here, with a lifetime guarantee on boardshorts tough enough to be handed down. The 310 is the do-everything length that works at the beach and the burger stand after.
Our pick — 310 Boardshorts, $160 (opens in a new tab)


Shirts & polos
San Francisco, CA
$$Tanks/tees from $22; shirts to ~$130
San Francisco’s shirt label makes its limited-run shirts in the Bay Area and its polos in New York, with per-product “Made in USA” language right on the pages, often pairing Japanese-woven fabrics with American construction. A 90-plus-product US-made collection at prices ($15 tees to ~$130 shirts) that make it one of the most accessible US-sewn shirt brands going.
Bay Area-sewn shirts, NY-made polos; often Japanese fabric
Our pick — The Made in USA shirt collection (opens in a new tab)


Denim
Los Angeles, CA · Est. 2005
$$$118–168
The affordability play in American selvedge: cut, sewn, and finished in Los Angeles from Japanese mills’ fabric, at $118–$168, roughly half what US-made selvedge usually runs. The direct-to-consumer math is the whole trick, and the quality punches way above the price.
Our pick — The True Straight in whatever 15oz run is current, from $128 (opens in a new tab) (individual fabrics sell out and rotate)


Dress shirts & tailoring
US-sewn · Est. 1818
$$US-made bow ties ~$90; OCBD $198; suits $1,498
The oldest name in American menswear closed its US factories in 2020. But under new ownership it has brought back a small, explicitly labeled “American-Made” capsule: an oxford button-down at $198 and 1818 suits crafted in the USA from Italian-woven wool. It’s a handful of items, not a comeback. Still, if you want the most storied label in the category on an American-made shirt again, it exists.
~5–7 explicit American-Made SKUs; US factories closed 2020, capsule returned
Our pick — American-Made Oxford Cloth Button-Down, $198 (opens in a new tab)


Tees & denim
Mohnton, PA (tees) / LA (jeans) · Est. 2013
$$US-made tees $48; selvedge jeans $278
The best reshoring story in menswear. In 2023, Buck Mason bought the 150-year-old Mohnton Knitting Mills in Pennsylvania, plus its sister sewing factory, and put the original workforce back to work knitting tees from American-grown cotton. Their slub and Pima tees now go fiber-to-finished-shirt in the USA, and their Japanese selvedge jeans are cut and sewn by hand in Los Angeles. Their site groups the domestic pieces in a Made in USA collection; much of the broader catalog is imported.
Tees knit at their PA mill from US cotton; jeans sewn in LA; most of catalog imported
Our pick — Pima Classic Tee, $48 (opens in a new tab) and the Loomstate Selvedge Full Saddle Jean, $278 (opens in a new tab)


Heavyweight sweats & tees
Norristown, PA · Est. 1948
$$Heavyweight hoodie ~$110; tees ~$72, via stockists
The cult classic. Camber has been knitting and sewing brutally heavyweight sweats and tees in Norristown, Pennsylvania since 1948: Texas cotton, New Jersey milling, zero marketing budget, which is why a hoodie this good undercuts every hype brand making a lesser one. Their site is wholesale-only; buy through stockists like Totem Brand Co.
Our pick — Cross-Knit Heavyweight Hoodie via Totem Brand Co., ~$110 (opens in a new tab)


Work boots
Martinsburg, PA
$$$$234–390
Carolina’s Union Built collection (about 38 styles) is made by UFCW union workers at their factory in my hometown Martinsburg, Pennsylvania, labeled with the honest “Union Made in the USA with Global Parts” (independent teardowns put US content around 96%). The Union Built collection is the American-made line; the rest of the catalog is imported.
~38 Union Built styles (UFCW, ‘with global parts’); rest imported
Our pick — AMP USA 8″ Moc Toe Work Boot, $264.99 (opens in a new tab)


Fragrance & home scents
Brooklyn, NY
$$$80 pocket spray; $225/50ml
Brooklyn’s defining indie fragrance house, compounding its perfumes in-house in New York: small-batch scents with a storytelling streak that made them the style press’s favorite. It goes beyond colognes, too. They make candles and even car air fresheners that smell more like a Todd Snyder store than a gas station. Not clothing, but nothing finishes an outfit more invisibly, and Debaser has a real cult following.
Brooklyn-compounded; COO labeling informal
Our pick — Debaser Eau de Parfum, 50ml, $225 (opens in a new tab), or the $80 pocket spray to start


Boots
Portland, OR
$$$US-made styles $470–550
Danner’s Portland, Oregon factory turns out its USA-made lines by hand, most famously the Mountain Light, the heritage hiker that never goes out of style. The Portland-built styles (the Mountain Light, the Portland Select collection) are flagged clearly on their site; much of the catalog is imported.
Only Portland-built styles (Mountain Light, Portland Select); ~30% of output
Our pick — Mountain Light, Made in USA with GORE-TEX, $470 (opens in a new tab)


Socks
Northfield, VT
$$22–30, lifetime guarantee
Every single pair is knit, finished, and inspected at the family mill in Northfield, Vermont, and every pair carries an unconditional lifetime guarantee: wear a hole in them, they replace them, forever. At $22–$30, one of the cheapest tickets on this list to genuinely American-made everyday gear.
Our pick — The Standard Merino Crew, ~$24 (opens in a new tab)


Jeans
Chicago, IL · Est. 2016
$Tees $25; jeans $40–89
Chicago’s answer to the $200 selvedge question: jeans cut and sewn in their own 25,000-square-foot factory on the West Side for $59–$85. They bought the building in 2023 and now do contract manufacturing for other brands on the same floor. The Tailored Fit at $75 might be the best value in everyday American-made denim. Brave Star owns that argument on the selvedge end; Dearborn owns it here.
Own Chicago factory; Cone (Mexico) fabric, ‘cut and sewn in Chicago’
Our pick — Tailored Fit in Dark Wash, $75 (opens in a new tab)


Knits & varsity jackets
Portland, OR · Est. 1920
$$$Sweaters & varsity jackets ~$300–625; tees $65, socks $32
Portland, Oregon’s century-old knitting mill, family-owned and still making its heavyweight wool sweaters, cardigans, and varsity jackets entirely in-house. This is the company other heritage brands hire when they need something made properly. The varsity jacket is the showpiece; the shawl cardigans are forever pieces.
Our pick — Varsity Jacket in Dark Navy/Luggage, $625 (opens in a new tab)


Merino wool
Dillon, MT (ranch); US partner mills
$Socks $19; tees $79–85
“Sheep to shelf” isn’t a slogan here, it’s the actual supply chain: American-grown merino, spun, knit, and sewn entirely in the USA, one of the only wool brands anywhere that can say it. Their base layers and tees are the rare technical gear with a fully domestic story (blends use American-made synthetic fibers, which they disclose plainly).
US-grown wool, US-spun/knit/sewn; blends use US synthetics
Our pick — Vapor Tee, $79 (opens in a new tab)


Bags
Duluth, MN · Est. 1882
$$Packs ~$175–350; small leather goods from $12
The oldest canvas-and-leather pack maker in America, sewing bags in Duluth, Minnesota since 1882, with a lifetime guarantee on every stitch. Heritage looks that work as well on a commute as a canoe trip.
Our pick — Wanderer Backpack, $310 (opens in a new tab)


Blankets
Faribault, MN · Est. 1865
$$Blankets ~$199–400; throws from $79
A 160-year-old Minnesota woolen mill weaving blankets start to finish in the USA, and, as of this year, the official blanket of Team USA for the 2026 Winter Olympics. A wool throw from Faribault does more for a living room than most furniture.


Socks
Mount Airy, NC
$$15–25
The strongest supply-chain story in American socks: “every sock from start to finish right here in the USA,” including the wool itself, from American sheep, spun and knit at Nester Hosiery in Mount Airy, North Carolina. Where most US sock makers import yarn, Farm to Feet doesn’t.
Our pick — Mt. Airy Light Cushion crew, $24 (opens in a new tab)


Outerwear & bags
Kent, WA · Est. 1897
$$$Mackinaw Wool Vest $299; Cruiser $499; briefcase $495
We’re not going to sugarcoat this one: much of Filson’s catalog, including the iconic Tin Cloth jackets, is now imported. But the heart of the brand still beats in Kent, Washington, where the Mackinaw Wool Cruiser (patented 1914) and the Rugged Twill briefcases and duffles are still made. Shop Filson like a scalpel, not a shotgun: if the product page says “Stitched in Seattle” or “Made in USA,” it’s the real thing.
Our pick — Rugged Twill Original Briefcase, $495 (opens in a new tab), and the Mackinaw Wool Cruiser Jacket, $499 (opens in a new tab), which sells out by season (sizes were gone at press time)


Outerwear, denim & basics
Los Angeles (NJ waxed cloth), CA
$$$Waxed trucker ~$298; All-American jeans; US-made tees under $50
Huckberry’s house label makes the waxed trucker jacket of the decade, cut, sewn, and finished in Los Angeles from 7oz Martexin waxed sailcloth milled in New Jersey, and made famous by a certain post-apocalyptic TV show. The American-made story runs deeper than the jacket, though: the All-American stretch denim (opens in a new tab) is US-made in three fits, the heavyweight pocket tees come in under $50, and the 10-Year hoodie is built here to outlast its own guarantee. Origin varies by product line, so check the one you’re buying; the flannel-lined trucker is the LA-made original, while some lightweight variants are made overseas.
Our pick — Flannel-Lined Waxed Trucker Jacket, ~$298 (opens in a new tab)


Socks
Mount Airy (Nester Hosiery), NC · Est. 1900
$$9–20/pair
Knitting American socks since 1900, including the original Rockford Red Heel, the sock your grandmother turned into a monkey. A chapter closed in 2025 when the historic Iowa mill shut down, but the brand and its production found a home with Nester Hosiery in Mount Airy, North Carolina, one of the country’s premier sock mills, where the line is still knit in the USA. At $9 a pair, the cheapest thing in this guide.
US-knit; some imported yarns. Iowa mill closed 2025; now knit in NC
Our pick — Original Rockford Red Heel crew, from $9 (opens in a new tab)


Denim & outerwear
San Juan Capistrano / LA sewing, CA
$$$Jeans $285–325; tees from $60
The Broderick brothers’ San Juan Capistrano operation has grown from a promising denim startup into a full American-made line of 90-plus denim styles, outerwear, and wovens, every piece of it cut and sewn in Los Angeles. In an era when success usually means offshoring, Freenote scaled up without moving a single sewing machine overseas.
Our pick — Belford Straight 14.25oz Black Grey Denim, $285 (opens in a new tab)


Bags
Duluth, MN · Est. 1992
$$Accessories from $27; packs $100–500
Duluth, Minnesota’s other great canvas bag maker, with every pack sewn in their West Superior Street workshop since 1992 from waxed cotton canvas, premium leather, and solid brass, guaranteed for life. Slightly more rugged-vintage in feel than crosstown elder Duluth Pack; between the two of them, this one town covers American bag-making better than most countries. Primer’s been on this beat a while: we featured their Large Flight Bag as the ideal weekender back in 2010, and the bag hasn’t changed because it didn’t need to.
Our pick — Flight Bag, $220 (opens in a new tab)


Shirts
Lafayette, TN · Est. 1932
$$$$225–255
Making American shirts since 1932, now at their company-owned factory in Lafayette, Tennessee, where about 50 steps and 25 pieces go into every shirt. Gitman Vintage, the fashion-forward sub-label, comes off the same American sewing floor. Around $255 for what is arguably the best ready-to-wear oxford made in this country.
Our pick — White Button Down Oxford, $255 (opens in a new tab)


Varsity & leather jackets
San Francisco, CA · Est. 1922
$$$$$595–745
Making jackets in San Francisco since 1922. They started with longshoreman coats on the docks and became the varsity jacket maker, “proudly made in San Francisco” on every one. They’re also the factory sewing private-label jackets, no Golden Bear name on the label, for brands that charge more for less. Wool bodies, leather sleeves, and a century of pattern-making you can feel in the fit.
Our pick — The Albany varsity in Black Melton Wool & Leather, $745 (opens in a new tab)


Heavyweight tees
Boston, MA (HQ; US factories) · Est. 1983
$GT-2800 tee ~$56 (basics from $25)
Boston-born and making the same fully domestic heavyweight tee since 1983: US-grown cotton, US-spun yarn, US-sewn, 8-plus ounces of fabric that breaks in like denim. The strongest endorsement comes from the other side of the Pacific, where Goodwear sits in premier Japanese department stores and boutiques. Japan’s heritage-menswear scene is the most demanding audience American clothing has, and when a country with the world’s best loopwheeled tees of its own decides yours are worth importing, you’re doing something right. This is what t-shirts felt like before fast fashion, at a price ($56) that reflects actual American labor rather than a logo.
Our pick — Classic Fit Heavyweight Tee, $56 (opens in a new tab)


Shirts
Houston, TX · Est. 1883
$$$RTW $265; bespoke $315–395
Houston’s first family of shirtmaking, since 1883. Every single shirt, from ready-to-wear to full bespoke, is still cut and sewn at their Richmond Avenue workshop by fourth-generation owners. The 1883 sport shirt line gets you genuine American benchmade quality at $265; the bespoke program is one of the last of its kind in the country.
Our pick — 1883 Chambray Sport Shirt, $265 (opens in a new tab)


Belts
Endicott (HQ), NY · Est. 1949
$$US-made belts from $80, 100-yr warranty
Full-grain, one-piece leather belts made in the USA with a literal 100-year warranty, most under $100. One honest note: some of their budget items are imported; the USA-made collection is clearly marked.
Shop the marked USA-made collections; some budget items imported
Our pick — The Crazy Horse USA-made jean belt, $80 (opens in a new tab)


Denim
Los Angeles, CA
$$$Jeans $228–300 (sale from $114)
A Japanese denim house with an American factory floor: Kato cuts and sews its jeans in Los Angeles from Japanese stretch selvedge, “the highest quality imported Japanese denim on American soil,” as they put it. The result is some of the most comfortable raw denim made anywhere, at a fair price for LA construction.
Our pick — The Barrel Classic Straight in Vinnie 14oz Selvedge, $288 (opens in a new tab)


Denim
Nashville, TN · Est. 2009
$$$From ~$235; jeans ~$285
Nashville’s denim house started in 2009 with a simple promise, make all of it in America, and unlike most brands that outgrew that promise, they kept it. Jeans are still patterned, cut, and sewn in the USA, with an in-house sewing room, and their natural indigo line is about as domestic as clothing gets: Alabama-grown cotton, North Carolina spinning, Tennessee-grown indigo. Denim fabric on the core line is Japanese; the construction is all here.
Natural indigo line is fully domestic (AL cotton, NC spinning, TN indigo)
Our pick — Oliver Military Trouser in Olive, $235 (opens in a new tab), or The Willie (opens in a new tab), their signature straight-leg jean


Sandals
Pearl City, Oahu, HI · Est. 1946
$$$130–155
By most accounts the last footwear brand still manufacturing in Hawaii, handmaking leather and suede sandals in Pearl City, Oahu since 1946. A grown man’s flip-flop: substantial leather, real arch support, and the kind of thing that looks right with shorts at a cookout instead of like you wandered out of a locker room.
Our pick — Classic Leather Thong Sandal, ~$150 (opens in a new tab)


Ivy tailoring & ties
NY (ties) / MA (shirts) · Est. 1902
$$$OCBDs $185; US-made blazers $895, suits to $1,995 (socks from $22)
The Ivy institution runs a genuinely deep Made-in-USA collection of over 400 products, each labeled right in the title: ties sewn in New York by the same maker for fifty years, oxford button-downs from an 80-year-old Massachusetts shirt factory ($185), US-made blazers, suits, cotton sweaters, and $22 socks. One heads-up: the beloved Shaggy Dog shetland is made in Scotland, so it doesn’t count here, though everything in the collection linked below does.
Our pick — The Made-in-USA collection (opens in a new tab); start with an oxford button-down, ~$185


Boots, totes & chairs
Brunswick, ME · Est. 1912
$$Bean Boots ~$149; Boat & Totes from ~$35
Let’s be clear about the scope: L.L.Bean’s clothing is imported. But the products that built the company are still made in Brunswick, Maine: the Bean Boot (stitched there since 1912), the Boat and Tote, and their leather belts, and they remain some of the most iconic, affordable American-made goods you can buy. The All-Weather Adirondack chairs are made in the USA too, in a poly lumber that shrugs off winters the way the boots do. The duck boot and the canvas tote are arguably the two most recognizable American-made designs in existence.
Bean Boots, Boat & Tote, belts, All-Weather Adirondack chairs; clothing imported
Our pick — The Original Bean Boot, 8″ (opens in a new tab), the Boat and Tote (opens in a new tab), and the All-Weather Classic Adirondack Chair (opens in a new tab)


Belts
Corona, CA · Est. 1968
$$Belts $50–134; small goods from $19
Making belts at a third-generation family factory in Southern California since 1968. For decades their belts shipped under other brands’ names (they’ve supplied the likes of Nordstrom and Allen Edmonds); now they sell direct. Full-grain leather from $50 to $134, made in Corona, California.


Western boots
El Paso, TX · Est. 1883
$$$$Handmade in Texas line from $995
The great name in cowboy boots has been building them in Texas since 1883, and the real ones still come out of the El Paso factory, where around 200 hands touch each pair over four to six weeks. Scope matters here too: Lucchese also produces lines in Mexico, Italy, and Brazil; the Handmade in Texas collection is the El Paso work.
Our pick — The Handmade in Texas collection, from $995 (opens in a new tab)


Belts
Long Island City, NY
$$$130–210, made to order
The minimalist’s belt, made the maximalist’s way: cut, dyed, stitched, and waxed to order in a Long Island City studio, one at a time, in about two weeks. Clean solid-brass hardware and Belgian veg-tan leather with zero branding: the belt for people who notice belts.
Our pick — Suede Very Slim Western, $150 (opens in a new tab)


Oxford shirts
New England workshop (Montana HQ) · Est. 1982
$$Pima oxfords $180–295
The oxford button-down as the old haberdashers understood it: full cut, an unlined collar with a proper roll, heavy Pima cloth, and a product page that reads “Made in the USA, of course.” Mercer has been at it since 1982 and only got around to real e-commerce in 2024, which tells you where their priorities live. First-time customers can take 25% off select shirts, which softens the first-order math considerably.
Exact factory town unconfirmed (New England); no map pin by design
Our pick — Classic Pima Oxford, $180–295 (opens in a new tab)


Jewelry
Miami, FL
$$Jewelry $75–220
Miansai’s bracelets, necklaces, rings, and leather goods are handmade by an in-house team at their Miami workshop, founder’s desk in the same building as the casting room. Their watches run Swiss and Japanese movements; the jewelry and leather goods are the Miami-made pieces. (New to wearing any of this? Our men’s jewelry guide covers how to pull it off.)
Our pick — Square Step Signet Ring in Gold Vermeil, $205 (opens in a new tab)


Sneakers
MA & ME factories · Est. 1906
$$$200–250
The only major athletic brand still operating American factories: five of them, in Massachusetts and Maine. The MADE in USA 990-series is a certified style icon that works with jeans as well as gym shorts. Full transparency: New Balance’s own standard is “domestic value of 70% or more,” and the MADE line is a small share of what they sell. Even so, nothing else in sneakers comes close at this scale.
≥70% domestic value standard; small share of total sales
Our pick — Made in USA 992, ~$200 (opens in a new tab)


Chinos & activewear
Farmington, ME + Asheboro, NC
$$Chinos $139; tees $32, socks from $9
The most complete “made here” claim in American apparel: “Field to Fabric.” Origin grows or sources every input domestically (fiber, thread, hardware), mills its own fabric, and sews in Maine and North Carolina. The vibe is more rucksack than boardroom, but the range is broader than you’d guess (jeans, tees, socks, wallets, technical pants, even US-made rubber slides, which may be the only ones in existence), and the VRSA chino is a legitimately sharp everyday pant with the most patriotic supply chain money can buy.
“Field to Fabric”: fully domestic inputs
Our pick — VRSA Chino, ~$139 (opens in a new tab)


Blankets
Pendleton, OR + Washougal, WA mills · Est. 1863
$$US-woven blankets $179–450; Glacier NP from $295
Precision matters here: Pendleton’s legendary blankets are still dyed, spun, woven, and finished at the company’s own Oregon and Washington mills: fully American-made and worth every penny. The standard wool shirts, though, are sewn overseas from that American fabric.
Our pick — Glacier National Park Blanket, from $295 (opens in a new tab)


Boat shoes & moccasins
Lewiston, ME
$$$Made-to-order from ~$349
True Maine handsewns from a Lewiston workshop of about forty craftspeople. Order made-to-order and your shoes are built for you in Maine, the old way. Be aware the brand now runs a hybrid model: some in-stock shoes are made by overseas partners, so the made-to-order route is the reliably Maine-made one.
Our pick — Canoe Shoe, made to order, $349 (opens in a new tab)


Neckwear
Fort Mill, SC · Est. 1985
$Bow ties $45–85; neckties and squares too
Bow ties hand-cut and hand-sewn in a Fort Mill, South Carolina workshop since 1985, shipped same-day, and stocked in 330-some shops around the country. Their about page says it straight: “proudly sewn in the USA from imported fabrics.” Bow ties run $45 to $85, with neckties, cummerbunds, and pocket squares for the full Southern-wedding kit.
Our pick — Signature silk bow ties, $65–80 (opens in a new tab)


Loafers & moccasins
Lewiston, ME · Est. 1967
$$$Slippers $198; loafers $230–400
Family-run shop in Lewiston, Maine, hand-sewing moccasins and loafers since 1967, the genuine article behind every “handsewn in Maine” claim you’ve ever read. Their beefroll penny loafer is the summer shoe that gets better every year you own it.
Our pick — Beefroll Penny Loafer, ~$328 (opens in a new tab)


Eyewear
Randolph, MA · Est. 1973
$$$$285; $345 polarized
Military-spec aviators built in Randolph, Massachusetts through a 200-step process. The company has supplied US pilots for over four decades, and the civilian versions are the same glasses. Between Randolph and AO you’re choosing between the two genuine American aviators: AO has the moon landing, Randolph is the one on military contract today.
Our pick — Aviator Military Special Edition in Matte Chrome, from $285 ($345 polarized) (opens in a new tab)


Boots
Red Wing, MN · Est. 1905
$$$$320–350
The Heritage line (Iron Ranger, Classic Moc, Blacksmith) is still made in Red Wing, Minnesota, with leather from the company’s own S.B. Foot Tanning Co. down the road. That vertical integration makes it one of the most genuinely domestic supply chains in footwear. The word “Heritage” is doing real work here: much of Red Wing’s broader work-boot catalog is now made overseas, while the Heritage line remains the made-in-Minnesota one.
Heritage line only; own tannery. Work-boot portfolio largely imported
Our pick — Iron Ranger in Amber Harness, $349.99 (opens in a new tab)


Jeans & overalls
Shawnee, OK · Est. 1903
$Beanie $20; jeans $59.95–89.95
Making jeans and bib overalls in Shawnee, Oklahoma since 1903, and still selling US-made five-pockets for about $70, the most affordable American-made jeans in existence. Everything on their main site is made in the USA (a clearly labeled imported outlet line exists separately, and honestly, they’ll tell you: it subsidizes the American factory).
Our pick — #105 American Made Jean, 14oz dark stone wash, $69.95 (opens in a new tab)


Hats & leather goods
Kansas City, MO
$Caps $38–60; wallets $85
Kansas City’s ballcap factory. Sandlot cuts and sews its caps and leather goods at its own workshop on Southwest Boulevard, with a crew of around 45 that turns out more than a hundred thousand hats a year for clients like the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. When Taylor Swift showed up at Coachella in one of their caps, the crew had to make 8,000 more in a matter of weeks, which is the kind of problem every factory in this guide would love to have. Caps run $38 to $60, and the wallets and belts come off the same floor in full-grain leather.


Basics & casualwear
Los Angeles (knit/dye), CA · Est. 2006
$Beanie $40; tees $65–75; chino $200
S.K.U. has made its clothes in the USA since it launched in 2006: tees knit in Los Angeles from Delta-region American cotton spun at Parkdale Mills, garments dyed and finished in California, workwear in American canvas. The garment-dyed, lived-in aesthetic is exactly Primer’s lane, and their All American Chino (a collab with Imogene + Willie) is fully domestic down to the Mount Vernon Mills fabric.
Our pick — AA Twill Terry Blazer, $280 (opens in a new tab), or the All American Chino, $200 (opens in a new tab)


Leather jackets & wool coats
Union, NJ · Est. 1913
$$$$Perfecto jacket $1,065; US-made accessories from ~$85
Still family-owned, still making every men’s leather jacket and wool coat at their Union, New Jersey factory, the same company that invented the leather motorcycle jacket a century ago. The Perfecto has crossed the $1,000 line ($1,065), which is genuinely what a US-made heirloom leather jacket costs now. The knitwear and some accessories are imported; the leather is the point anyway.
Our pick — 141 Classic Racer Motorcycle Jacket, $1,060 (opens in a new tab)


Workwear
Crockett, TX · Est. 1972
$$Core Classics ~$90–125
The painter pant, still made where it’s always been made: the family’s factory in Crockett, Texas, running since 1972, using Mount Vernon Mills fabric from Georgia. The Core Classics collection (OG and 80s painter pants, fatigues, shop jackets) is the Texas-made line; the seasonal colorways, tees, and sweats are made abroad, and Stan Ray is upfront about the split. The fatigue is the direct descendant of the Army’s OG-107, and our OG-107 fatigue pants guide covers that lineage and how to wear them now.
Core Classics are the Texas-made line; seasonal colorways, tees, and sweats are made abroad
Our pick — OG Loose Fatigue in Olive Sateen, $90 (opens in a new tab) (US-made collection here (opens in a new tab))


Hats
Garland, TX · Est. 1865
$$Felt westerns $180–260; straw from $75
The most famous name in American headwear still makes its western felt and straw hats in Garland, Texas, reportedly the last US plant producing fur-felt hat bodies start to finish, “the same way we’ve been making them for over 150 years.” Stetson-licensed caps and apparel are made offshore; the western hats are the Texas-made line.
Western felt/straw hats only; licensed caps/apparel offshore
Our pick — Western felt and straw hats (straw from ~$75, felt from ~$180) (opens in a new tab)


Headwear
Ironwood, MI · Est. 1903
$Original cap $50
The 1903 railroad cap, still sewn at the Jacquart family’s factory in Ironwood, Michigan, deep in the Upper Peninsula, where they run public factory tours. Fifty bucks for a wool cap you’ll wear every winter for decades and that gets more character with every year.
Our pick — The Original Stormy Kromer Cap, $50 (opens in a new tab)


Denim
San Francisco, CA · Est. 2009
$$$Jeans $275; coverall $189; tees and socks from $10
Seventeen years in, Tony Patella and Pete Searson still have every pair cut and sewn in San Francisco, one of the last brands genuinely making jeans in the city that invented them. The fabric is premium Japanese Kaihara selvedge (the great American mill that supplied them, Cone’s White Oak plant, closed in 2017), so call it what it is: San Francisco-made jeans from the world’s best denim.
SF cut-and-sew; Japanese Kaihara fabric
Our pick — Stock Coverall Jacket, $189 (opens in a new tab), their San Francisco-sewn take on the chore coat, and the same style we picked back in 2017


Flannel shirts
East Barre, VT · Est. 1991
$$84–89
Family-owned since 1991, hand-cutting and sewing flannel shirts in Vermont. The fabric is a GOTS-certified European weave, the construction pure New England. At $89 it’s one of the most affordable US-sewn garments anywhere, and the shirts have that dense, blanket-soft hand that mall flannel can’t fake.
VT-sewn; Portuguese (GOTS) fabric
Our pick — Men’s Classic Flannel Shirt in Dark Gray, ~$89 (opens in a new tab)


Work boots
Merrill & Marshfield, WI
$$$$245–285
Union-made in Wisconsin since the 1940s, and going the opposite direction of everyone else: they opened a brand-new $14.5 million factory in Marshfield in June 2026. About 80% of their footwear is US-made; the American Heritage moc toe, “made in the USA with USA and globally sourced components,” is the wedge-sole icon that rivals boots twice its price.
‘USA and globally sourced components’; ~80% of footwear WI-made, union
Our pick — American Heritage 6″ Tobacco Moc Toe, $264.95 (opens in a new tab)


Jeans
East Rutherford, NJ
$$$Tees $100; jeans $280–300
One of the few clothing brands in America that owns its own factory: a 50-machine operation in East Rutherford, New Jersey, where two seamstresses build each garment start to finish, made to order in about two weeks. The line has been deliberately pared down to jeans, button-ups, and tees, with fit options (multiple inseams, hem widths, rises) no mass brand can touch.
Our pick — Original 13 Selvedge in Dark Wash, $300 (opens in a new tab)


Watches
Scottsdale, AZ
$$$USA-assembled line from $279
An honest watch at an honest price: Vaer assembles its USA-line field watches in Scottsdale, Arizona (some with American-made Ameriquartz movements) and is refreshingly upfront that “assembled in USA” is exactly what it means. Field watches that look far more expensive than they are.
Our pick — C5 Tactical Field Solar 40mm, USA-assembled, $379 (opens in a new tab)


Leather jackets
Fall River, MA · Est. 1974
$$$$$629–1,700
The other legendary American leather jacket maker, building motorcycle and casual leathers in Fall River, Massachusetts since 1974, “cut and hand made in the U.S.A. of imported and domestic materials.” Racers swear by them; style guys know them as the Schott alternative with a harder edge and a starting price under $650.
‘Hand made in USA of imported and domestic materials’; few flagged imports
Our pick — Model AR, $629 (opens in a new tab)


Watches
Nashville, TN
$$$$Automatic Issue $3,250–4,200; the in-house Cal 1003 American Issue sells out between runs
No one in American watchmaking goes deeper than Weiss, machining the cases and movement parts in its own Nashville workshop that every other brand imports. The grail is the American Issue, whose Caliber 1003 movement is made in-house down to everything but the mainspring and jewels, and it sells out between limited runs. What you can buy today is the Automatic Issue field watch: a Swiss base movement finished and assembled by hand in Nashville, in a house-made case, from $3,250. Both are the real Nashville article; only one has the homemade heart.
Watches built in Nashville with house-made cases; the Automatic line runs a Swiss base movement, while the American Issue’s movement is made in-house
Our pick — 38mm Automatic Issue Field Watch, $3,250 (opens in a new tab)


Socks
Sheboygan, WI · Est. 1905
$$11–26
Knitting socks in Sheboygan, Wisconsin since 1905, and unambiguous about it: “all of its socks are knit domestically,” with the vast majority of materials American-sourced too. The budget-friendly institution of American socks: $15 to $26 a pair, sold everywhere, and a 120-year-old family story to boot.
Our pick — Cushioned Classics crew, ~$16 (opens in a new tab)


Boots
Big Rapids, MI · Est. 1883
$$$$385–405
The original 1000 Mile boot is still handcrafted in Big Rapids, Michigan: Horween Chromexcel from Chicago, Vibram heel from Pennsylvania, Goodyear welt. One critical warning: Wolverine now also sells a “1000 Mile Legacy” sub-line at half the price with cement construction and no USA-Built badge: same name, but not the Michigan-made boot. Look for the “USA-Built” badge and the ~$400 price tag; that’s the real one.
Our pick — 1000 Mile Plain-Toe Original Boot, $404.95 (opens in a new tab)
At a Glance
The Complete Table
Sortable, tap any column heading.
How We Vetted This List
Every brand above was checked in mid-2026 against its live product pages (the actual country-of-origin language, not the marketing copy) plus factory news, ownership changes, and enthusiast-community reporting. American manufacturing is a moving target: mills close, brands get acquired, production moves overseas with no announcement. Where a company makes some things here and some things abroad, we’ve told you exactly which is which, because a guide like this is only useful if you can trust it.
Have a favorite American-made brand we missed? Tell us in the comments.
