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Premier League kits 2025-26: Every confirmed kit for the new season

We’re just over a month away from the start of the 2025-26 Premier League season, so excitement is building.

A lot of fans look to new signings as a way to prepare for the new campaign. But there are other ways, including the release of new kits. While clubs used to keep their kits for a few seasons, we now have fresh sets every summer.

Some manufacturers like to play it safe, especially with the home kits. But others try to catch the eye with bold designs. After all, football kits are now more than just a way to show your support for a club. It’s all about fashion.

So, who has caught the eye so far, for right and wrong reasons?

We’ve taken a look at all the confirmed kits so far to see what we’ve got coming in 2025-26.

Arsenal

Home

Adidas have had a good run of kits for Arsenal, and the latest home offering is no different. It looks plain red with white shoulders and sleeves, but the red also includes a gothic A printed faintly to add a bit of personality.


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Aston Villa

Away

Aston Villa have gone for the interesting route of releasing their away kit for 2025-26 before their home one. It’s quite a nice kit, mostly black with a design on the shoulders said to be inspired by the Bullring shopping centre in Birmingham.


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Brentford

Home

Brentford’s 2025-26 home kit is steeped in history. It marks 100 years since Brentford switched to red-and-white stripes having experimented with a number of styles in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It’s basic in terms of design, but that’s what Brentford are going for with a nod to the past. And there are thin red lines just outside the red stripes to make it slightly different. The collar also has a nod to history, in the style of the old laced-up collars, with a 100 logo on the back of the kit.

Brighton

Home

Brighton and Hove Albion’s latest take on blue and white stripes isn’t too different from their 2024-25 kit. This one is more plain, though, with just plain blue stripes — and a horizontal blue hoop for the sponsor. They have been bold and switched the colour of their collar from blue to white, though!

Away

This is much better from Brighton. It may be an acquired taste but the purple is a nice change, especially with a darker shade down the middle. That same shade is on the edge of the sleeves and down the side. The kit does also follow the Nike template of trying the badge and logo down the middle, though that may take something away from the strip.

Burnley

Home

Burnley have gone as claret as they can for their new kit, with just a hint of blue on the sleeves and collars. And that light blue is also joined by a thin white stripe, which looks really smart. There’s also detailing on the body – which the release statement describes as being inspired by “mapping and the contour lines of the surrounding hills, including Pendle Hill”. We’re not sure how good your geography is, but it looks good.

Chelsea

Home

Another home kit with printing on, Chelsea’s new shirt is said to be inspired by ‘London’s iconic landmarks and creative culture’. They’ve kept a white collar and also brought back a red trim on the sides – harking back to kits of Chelsea past.

Away

Chelsea were the first Premier League club to announce both their home and away kits for the new season. The away kit is a nod back to a kit from the 70s, which had a red and green stripe down the middle — paying tribute to the successful Hungary side of the 1950s. But this time the red and green is more subtle, in thin stripes down the middle, as well as on the sleeves. It’s a nice looking shirt.

Everton

Home

Everton mark the start of a new era at the club with a nod to their fresh surroundings. The blue of their shirt includes a darker shade of horizontal wave, symbolising the River Mersey that runs alongside their new stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock. The collar has a slight strip of white which, while only minor, does had something extra to make this a nice kit.

Leeds

Home

Leeds United’s home kit is once again white, and that shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone. The clue’s in their nickname of the Whites. The Adidas logo and stripes are blue, but there’s an interesting detail on the sleeve edge and collar. It’s a blue and yellow pattern that may not mean much to anyone outside of Leeds. But the pattern represents the tiles of Lowfields Tunnel, which runs under the M621 to connects the north side of Lowfields Road to the south — for those on foot — en route to Elland Road. The club describes the tunnel as “more than a passage, it’s a ritual and a symbolic gateway to Elland Road”.

Man City

Home

Puma have gone slightly different with Manchester City’s new home kit, adding a white sash to the classic sky blue. But it’s not a bold sash, almost looking like a streak of light. Other than that, it’s a pretty normal kit.


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Man Utd

Home

Paying homage to Old Trafford is the order of the day for the new Manchester United home kit for the 2025-26 season. With its traditional red, the added black and white trim adds an edge but it’s not entirely different to their previous offerings.


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Newcastle

Home

There isn’t too much you can do when your kit is black-and-white stripes, but Newcastle United’s 2025-26 home offering tries to be a bit different. The stripes are separated by what’s been described as the shepherd’s check, noted as a ‘classic northern motif’ – which can give it a faded look from afar.

Third

Newcastle have gone fashionable for their third kit this season, with a throwback to their 1997-98 away kit. Now they’ve not gone as bold as to completely recreate that kit with the orange and green stripe down the side (boo!) but they’ve used the colours. The main colour of the shirt is a dark shade of blue with the Adidas trefoil logo and three stripes (alongside the sponsor) in orange. Then there’s a hint of mint green on the colour and sleeve edges.

Sunderland

Away

Sunderland are back in the Premier League for the first time in eight years, and they’ve announced their new away kit for the return. It’s a throwback to the 1989-91 away kit used while Sunderland were in the second division. Then, the kit was primarily blue with a white and red on the collar in a stripe – keeping Sunderland’s home identity. And they’ve brought back that colour scheme, though the collar doesn’t include the stripe — it’s just white with a red trim. But the blue isn’t just plain blue, it now features a pattern “inspired by the view of the Roker Beach lighthouse”. More and more kits are trying to bring links to the local surroundings, which we love.

Tottenham

Home

Tottenham Hotspur have kept a similar style in their 2025-26 home kit. Of course, it’s predominantly white with a bit of blue. This time, the blue comes down from either side of the neck, ending just under the armpits — front and back. There’s then a grey block down the rest of the sides. The badge and Nike logo are both in the middle above the sponsor, and does look likely crowded.


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Away

Tottenham have gone back to black for their away kit this season, which they claim to “engineered for speed and built for stealth”. It’s not completely black, with a slight silvery-grey checking across the kit — though you do have to look closely to really see it. The collar is the same colour as the checks, but again it’s very thin so doesn’t stand out. It’s a smart-looking kit.

West Ham

Home

West Ham United’s new home kit got mixed reviews from fans when it was released. And it’s easy to see why. The strip is a bit bland, going down the Burnley route of being mostly claret with a dash of blue. The blue here is only on the sleeve edges and collar — and even then it’s pinstriped — as well as down the side. It’s not bad, but it doesn’t really feel West Ham.

Wolves

Home

Wolverhampton Wanderers are another team slightly limited in terms of design, with their kits predominantly gold with a hint of black somewhere. And obviously they want to differentiate themselves from Hull City, so stripes are out of the question. This particular kit is a throwback to the kits Wolves had from 1970 to 1982, with a black collar and trim on the sleeve edge. On the gold itself is a print paying homage to Molineux Pleasure Grounds — a public park that stood before Molineux Stadium was built. For what it is, this is a nice effort.

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