Belstaff Worth Money

Belstaff Phoenix logo patch on waxed cotton — iconic British heritage outerwear

Are Belstaff Jackets Worth the Money?

An honest answer for the right buyer.

By OD's Designer Clothing | Updated April 2026 | 9 min read

Belstaff jackets start at around £350 and climb above £1,200 for leather. That is a serious amount of money for a jacket, and it deserves a serious answer to the question of whether the price is justified.

The short answer is: yes, for the right buyer. The longer answer requires understanding what you are actually paying for — and whether that aligns with how you live and what you want from outerwear.

1 | A Century of Heritage

Belstaff was founded in 1924 in Stoke-on-Trent. Eli Belovitch and Harry Grosberg set out to make outerwear capable of handling the British climate at speed — initially for motorcyclists, then for military personnel, aviators, and explorers. The brand's first customers did not choose Belstaff for aesthetics. They chose it because it kept them alive in bad weather.

That engineering-first philosophy has persisted through 100 years and multiple ownership changes. The brand is now headquartered in London and positions itself as a premium fashion label — but the core jacket construction reflects a lineage that was never about trends.

1924 — Founded in Stoke-on-Trent, waxed cotton outerwear for motorcyclists
1948 — Trialmaster jacket introduced — becomes the definitive motorcycle jacket of the era
1960s — Steve McQueen adopts the brand — association with speed and cool
2004 — Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman wear Belstaff for the Long Way Round — 19,000 miles across 12 countries
2017 — Brand acquired by Inditex group; premium fashion repositioning
2024 — Belstaff centenary — 100 years of endurance heritage

2 | Wax Cotton — What It Actually Is

Wax cotton is a tightly woven cotton fabric impregnated with a wax compound — historically paraffin-based, now typically a blend of paraffin and other waxes. The wax fills the gaps between the cotton fibres, making the fabric water-resistant without the need for a synthetic membrane.

The result is a fabric that breathes, softens with wear, and develops a patina unique to the wearer. Unlike Gore-Tex or nylon-based waterproofs, wax cotton ages rather than degrades. A jacket worn for 20 years will look different from the day it was bought — and typically better, in the view of people who understand what they are looking at.

Wax Cotton Properties

  • Water resistance: Effective in sustained rain when properly waxed
  • Windproofing: The dense weave blocks wind without a membrane
  • Breathability: Better than synthetic waterproofs for active use
  • Ageing: Softens and develops character with wear — improves over years
  • Maintenance: Requires rewaxing every 1–3 years depending on use

Belstaff uses a heavyweight wax cotton — typically 12 oz per square yard or above — that is stiffer than Barbour's equivalent when new but becomes supple and body-moulded over time. The heavier the wax cotton, the more durable the jacket and the better its weather resistance.

3 | Construction Quality

At this price point, construction detail matters. Belstaff jackets on the heritage wax cotton range demonstrate a level of specification that justifies the premium against mass-market outerwear.

Seaming

Double-stitched throughout on core jacket models. Stress points — arm attachment, pocket joins, zip seams — are reinforced. The stitch count and thread quality are perceptibly higher than fast-fashion outerwear at a quarter of the price.

Hardware

Solid brass or nickel hardware on zip pulls, buckles, and press studs. These components do not rust, do not corrode, and do not fail under extended use. Cheap outerwear uses plated zinc hardware that corrodes within two seasons.

Lining

Heritage wax cotton jackets are lined with quilted or tartan linings that add insulation and protect the inner surface of the jacket. Zip pockets inside are a standard feature on most models. The lining quality is consistent with the outer shell — no cutting corners on what you cannot see.

Pattern Cutting

Belstaff's cuts are tailored closer to the body than traditional country outerwear. The arm placement and shoulder shaping reflect pattern cutting that produces a jacket that moves with the wearer rather than around them. This is a meaningful difference from brands that use looser, one-size-fits-most pattern blocks.

4 | Who Wears Belstaff

Celebrity association does not make a jacket worth the money — but it reflects the brand's cultural positioning. Belstaff has been worn by people who chose it for function before fame adopted it.

  • Steve McQueen — wore Belstaff in the 1960s, including at the International Six Day Trials. A functional choice made before Belstaff became a fashion brand.
  • Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman — wore Belstaff for Long Way Round (2004) and Long Way Down (2007), covering thousands of miles across difficult terrain. Documentary footage, not advertising.
  • David Beckham — regularly photographed in Belstaff, particularly the Trialmaster and Brooklands models. His preference aligns with Belstaff's contemporary premium positioning.
  • Brad Pitt — photographed in Belstaff leather on multiple occasions.

What This Tells You

Belstaff attracts people who want functional quality with cultural credibility. The brand's celebrity associations are rooted in genuine use rather than paid partnerships from the early decades — which gives them a different weight from brands that simply license their name to celebrities for commercial arrangements.

5 | The Investment Piece Logic

A Belstaff Trialmaster in wax cotton costs approximately £650. Worn for 20 years with rewaxing every two years, that is £32.50 per year — or under £3 per month. Put against a fast-fashion jacket at £120 that lasts three seasons before the zip fails and the lining deteriorates, the Belstaff is cheaper over any meaningful time horizon.

This is the investment piece argument: not that the upfront cost is low, but that the cost-per-wear over a lifetime of use makes premium outerwear economically rational. The caveat is that it only applies if you actually wear the jacket.

Cost-Per-Wear Calculation

  • Belstaff Trialmaster: £650 ÷ 20 years = £32.50/year
  • Mid-range jacket (£180): £180 ÷ 4 years = £45/year
  • Fast fashion (£80): £80 ÷ 2 years = £40/year
  • The Belstaff wins on cost-per-year from year five onwards — and continues to improve with wear

There is also a secondary market consideration. A Belstaff Trialmaster in good condition with evidence of age holds meaningful resale value. A mid-range jacket in three-year-old condition holds nothing.

6 | Care Requirements

Belstaff wax cotton jackets have specific care requirements that are important to understand before purchase. They are not high-maintenance, but they are different from a synthetic waterproof.

  • Do not machine wash. Machine washing strips the wax compound. Spot clean with a damp cloth and cold water only.
  • Do not tumble dry or apply direct heat. Heat melts and redistributes the wax unevenly.
  • Rewax every 1–3 years depending on use. Apply wax reproofing compound evenly across the surface and warm gently (a hair dryer on a low setting, or a warm room) to help the wax penetrate the fabric.
  • Hang on a shaped hanger when not in use. Do not fold and store in a bag — the wax can crack at fold points over time.
  • Store in a cool, dry place. Wax cotton should not be stored in a warm environment for extended periods.

Leather Belstaff Jackets

Leather Belstaff jackets require leather conditioner applied every 6–12 months to prevent the leather from drying and cracking. Store on a broad hanger, away from direct sunlight. Do not use water to clean — use a specialist leather cleaner. With correct care, a leather Belstaff will outlast any synthetic alternative.

7 | When It Is NOT Worth the Money

Belstaff is worth the money for the right buyer. It is not worth it if:

  • You wear a jacket for one season and then buy something new regardless of condition
  • You primarily need a technical waterproof for running, cycling, or high-intensity outdoor activity — a Gore-Tex shell is better designed for that purpose
  • You prefer a relaxed, country-heritage aesthetic — in which case Barbour at half the price is a more appropriate choice
  • You do not want to invest time in care and maintenance — wax cotton requires attention that a synthetic jacket does not

The buyer who gets full value from a Belstaff is someone who appreciates construction, wants a jacket that improves with age, wears it regularly, and is prepared to care for it properly.

Shop Belstaff at OD's

Every piece below is in stock at OD's Designer Clothing — authorised UK stockist.

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