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The Low-Profile Trainer Is 2025’s Chicest Sneaker Trend


I have a confession to make. Despite being a seasoned fashion writer, some pieces of clothing simply don’t pique my interest. Blame it on personal preferences or my own proclivities, but sneakers are a kind of shoe that never really make an appearance in my sartorial arsenal.

There are some exemptions to the rule, of course. On certain occasions, like a weekend trot through London’s verdant parklands or a pre-work Pilates class, it’s practically compulsory to wear these functional flats. Apart from these rare occurrences, my relationship is fairly limited to reporting on the season’s biggest trainer styles or covering the latest designer collaboration, the new Jacquemus x Nike Moon shoe or Cecilie Bahnsen x Asics Gel-Cumulus sneaker. Well, that was until I came across the stylish low-profile trainer trend.

As the name suggests, low-profile trainers refer to a specific shape of shoe that’s cut low across the ankle and designed to remain close to the floor. With a minimal silhouette and streamlined structure, the motif has swiftly usurped chunkier iterations or high-tops as the trainer of the moment. But why has this format taken my fancy when so many before have passed me by?

If I were to psychoanalyse my own tastes, I would probably attribute my interest to this craze in the understated way they subvert sporting codes. While other trainers overtly reference performance or endurance, these slimmer pairs don’t inordinately show off the fact that they’re made for physical activity. On the contrary, their pared-back demeanour almost puts them in the same category as a ballet flat, gathered loafer or slender boot, albeit with an enhanced level of support and comfort.

@annabelrosendahl wears low-profile Miu Miu trainers with a suede bag and white jeans while in Norway.

We can trace the origins of the low-cut trainer trend to Miu Miu x New Balance 530 SL suede trainer, as first unveiled in the luxuriate’s spring/summer 2024 collection presentation during Paris Fashion Week.

In the same season, Dries Van Noten staged his final collection as creative director of his eponymous brand, leaving us with a parting gift of his lusted-over leather-trimmed trainers.

An image of the Dries Van Noten leather-trimmed shell low-profile trainers, one of the most popular style of the trend.

Now, nearly every major designer brand has issued its own viral version. Back in the summer, both Harry Styles and Jacob Elordi set the internet ablaze with their consecutive co-signs of the Maison Margiela Sprinter sneakers.