Stussy's been doing collabs since before half the streetwear world existed. Some hit legendary status — pieces people still talk about years later. Others fly under the radar, quiet little capsules that come and go. Here's a real look at the notable hoodie collaborations, including what's actually confirmed for 2026.One thing worth saying upfront — there's no official master list anywhere of every collab hoodie Stussy's ever made. So older stuff here reflects what's widely documented across streetwear circles. For 2026 specifically, sticking only to what's confirmed, nothing guessed.
Nike x Stussy
The one most people think of first, honestly. Nike and stussy go back to the early 2000s and haven't really slowed down since. Recent pieces include a washed, full-zip heavyweight fleece hoodie with that roomy fit Stüssy's known for, often paired with matching heavyweight fleece pants meant to round out the full look.
What sets this apart from most collabs — it just keeps going. Most brands do one drop and disappear. Nike and Stussy have stuck with it across sneakers, apparel, accessories, for years now, with the hoodies leaning heavyweight more often than not. Built for cold, not casual layering.
The design language stays pretty consistent release after release too. You'll usually see a co-branded chest graphic, sometimes a swoosh worked into the hood drawstrings or cuffs, and color palettes that lean muted rather than loud. It's less about flashy logos and more about subtle signals that tell other people you know what you're wearing without shouting it.
Junya Watanabe x Stussy
Different energy entirely from Stussy's usual partners. First collab was 2024, a grommetted hoodie that pulled attention well past streetwear's usual crowd. Second round happened at Watanabe's Fall/Winter 2026 runway during Paris Fashion Week — bigger this time, with khakis and a club blazer alongside the hoodie.
Strange pairing on paper. Watanabe's heritage-leaning, high-fashion approach meeting Stussy's surf-and-skate roots. But that's exactly the appeal. If you want a hoodie collab that doubles as a fashion piece rather than pure streetwear, this is it.
What makes this one worth tracking long-term is the unpredictability. Watanabe doesn't run on a fixed seasonal schedule the way Stussy's own seasonal collections do, so these pieces show up tied to runway calendars instead. That makes them harder to plan around, but it also means they rarely flood the market — production runs tend to stay smaller than mainstream collabs.
Our Legacy x Stussy
One of the more understated long-runners. This partnership's been going for years, and Stussy confirmed a 10th capsule release in June 2026 — which says something, given how few collabs make it that far. These drops usually focus on upcycled, reworked pieces. Hoodies with a deliberately worn-in feel instead of fresh-off-the-shelf polish.
The aesthetic here leans more workwear-adjacent than typical streetwear. Military jacket influences, vintage textures, pieces that look like they've already lived a life before you bought them. It's a sharp contrast to Stussy's usual clean graphic approach, and that contrast is probably why ten rounds of this collab haven't gotten stale yet.
Mountain Hardwear x Stussy
Feels newer but it's actually been a recurring seasonal thing for a few years now. Latest drop landed June 2026, mixing Mountain Hardwear's technical outdoor background into Stussy's streetwear DNA. Hoodies here borrow more from outdoor construction — reinforced seams, weather-resistant touches — layered onto Stussy's usual graphics and fit.
This collab tends to extend beyond just hoodies too, often including tents, sleeping bags, and other outdoor gear alongside the apparel. It's a wider lifestyle crossover rather than a pure clothing capsule, which makes the hoodie pieces feel like one part of a bigger seasonal story rather than the headline product every time.
If you're building a wardrobe around heavier collab pieces like these, our essentials hoodie guide covers sizing notes worth checking, since collab fits sometimes run different from Stussy's standard cuts. There's also an Essentials Tracksuit piece on pairing a heavyweight hoodie with matching bottoms if you want the complete set.
Older Collabs Worth Knowing
A handful of hoodie collaborations from Stussy's past are widely documented even though they predate 2026 entirely. Dior, fragment design, Supreme — all included hoodie pieces at various points, and they still come up whenever people talk collab history. Not 2026 releases, obviously. But they built the reputation current collabs get measured against, whether that's fair or not.
These older partnerships also set a kind of template for what makes a Stussy collab feel significant. It's rarely just slapping two logos together. The strongest ones usually involve genuine design input from both sides, which is part of why certain pieces from these collaborations still trade well above retail years after release.
What Collab Hoodies Typically Cost
Pricing on collab hoodies usually sits noticeably above Stussy's standard seasonal lineup, partly because of the extra licensing and production complexity involved, partly because limited runs justify a higher retail price from the start. Nike collabs in particular often launch at a premium compared to Nike's own standalone hoodie pricing, reflecting the dual-brand demand.
Resale only widens that gap further. A collab hoodie that retailed in a normal price range can end up trading for two or three times that within days of selling out, depending on how limited the run was and how much buzz the partnership generated leading up to release.
Spotting Real vs Fake
Collab pieces get faked more than standard releases — makes sense, resale demand runs higher. A few things actually help here. Check stitching around the collab logo specifically; most fakes get spacing or placement slightly off even when everything else looks convincing. Compare tag details against official product photos from the brand's own page, not just a seller's pics. And if the price feels too good for something known to resell well above retail — that's usually the giveaway right there.
Material quality is another tell. Genuine collab hoodies, especially heavyweight ones, tend to use noticeably better cotton than counterfeit versions trying to cut costs. If a hoodie feels thin or scratchy for something marketed as heavyweight, that's worth a second look before buying.
Why These Resell So High
Limited runs, mostly. Most collabs release in way smaller quantities than Stussy's standard seasonal stuff, so demand outpaces supply almost immediately. Throw in the partner brand's own pull — Nike, Watanabe, Dior, whoever — and you've got two fanbases chasing one piece instead of one.
Heavyweight collab hoodies tend to hold value better too, same pattern as Stussy's regular lineup. Collectors just associate thicker fabric with better quality, even when production costs were similar across both weights.
Caring for a Collab Hoodie
Since a lot of these pieces carry real resale or sentimental value, washing them properly matters more than it would for a basic hoodie. Cold water, inside out, and air drying instead of high dryer heat will protect both the print and the fabric structure over time. For heavyweight collab pieces especially, avoiding repeated high-heat drying cycles is the single biggest thing you can do to keep the garment looking close to original years down the line.
FAQs
What's the most established Stussy hoodie collab?
Nike x Stussy, by most measures — longest run, most consistent hoodie presence across the partnership.
Are collab hoodies usually heavyweight?
Mostly, yes, especially partnerships like Nike that lean into cold-weather builds. Lightweight collab pieces exist too, just less often.
Does Stussy work with fashion-world brands outside streetwear?
Yes — Junya Watanabe is the clearest current example, putting Stussy on a Paris Fashion Week runway.
How do I check if a collab hoodie's real?
Stitching and logo placement compared against official photos, tag details checked closely, and skepticism toward prices that seem too low.
Do collab hoodies fit like regular Stussy hoodies?
Not always. Sizing can shift depending on the partner brand's construction, so check the specific size guide for that release before buying.
Why do collab hoodies cost more than standard releases?
Limited production, extra licensing involved, and dual-brand demand all push retail and resale prices higher than Stussy's standard seasonal pieces.