Paris Fashion Week Fall 2026 kicks off on March 2 with a lineup featuring second collections from several new creative directors and one notable debut. Antonin Tron will present his first collection for Balmain, while designers like Jonathan Anderson at Dior show their sophomore efforts. The schedule spans nine days, highlighting established houses and emerging talents amid financial challenges at some brands.
Paris Fashion Week Fall 2026 commences on Monday, March 2, offering a platform for designers to refine their visions following last season's debuts. This season emphasizes second collections, which the event preview describes as crucial for revealing a designer's settled approach to a brand. Notable returnees include Jonathan Anderson at Dior, Miguel Castro Freitas at Mugler, Mark Thomas at Carven, Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez at Loewe, Duran Lantink at Jean Paul Gaultier, Matthieu Blazy at Chanel, Pierpaolo Piccioli at Balenciaga, Michael Rider at Celine, and Glenn Martens at Maison Margiela. These sophomore shows may indicate buyer responses or shifts in creative direction, potentially signaling confidence or bold changes.
The sole major debut is Antonin Tron's first collection for Balmain on Day 3, Wednesday, March 4 at 13:30 (7:30 EST). Pieter Mulier presents his final collection for Alaïa on the same day at 21:00 (15:00 EST), expected to be impactful. At McQueen, Seán McGirr faces a pivotal moment on Day 7, Sunday, March 8 at 20:00 (14:00 EST), amid recent financial troubles at the brand and parent company Kering.
The full schedule unfolds over nine days:
Day 1 (Monday, March 2): Starts at 14:30 (10:30 EST) with IFM Master of Arts, followed by Co, Weisanto, Vautrait, Burn Alkyl, Kimhekim, Julie Kegels, Hodakova, and Vaquera at 20:30 (4:30 EST).
Day 2 (Tuesday, March 3): Includes Zomer and Ganni at 10:00 (4:00 EST), Marie Adam-Leenaerdt, Maitrepierre, Mame Kurogouchi, Christian Dior at 14:30 (8:30 EST), Matières Fécales, Anrealage, Pressiat, Alain Paul, and Saint Laurent at 20:00 (14:00 EST).
Day 3 (Wednesday, March 4): Features LouLou de Saison, Courreges, Reverie by Caroline Hú, The Row, Balmain, Dries Van Noten, Stella McCartney, Acne Studios, Tom Ford, and Alaïa.
Day 4 (Thursday, March 5): Chloé, Junko Shimada, Off-White, Carven, Rabanne, Uma Wang, Gauchere, Cecile Bahnsen, Icicle, Schiaparelli, Mossi, Rick Owens, and Isabel Marant.
Day 5 (Friday, March 6): Mugler, Undercover, Loewe, Ruohan, Issue Miyake, Vaillant, Jitrois, Lanvin, Nina Ricci, Givenchy, Yohji Yamamoto, and Victoria Beckham.
Day 6 (Saturday, March 7): Barbara Bui, Veronique Leroy, Junya Watanabe, Never, Celine, Noir Kai Ninomiya, Dice Kayek, Hermès, Vivienne Westwood, Machos Africa, Elie Saab, Comme des Garçons, Ann Demeulemeester, and Balenciaga.
Day 7 (Sunday, March 8): Margaret Howell, Paloma Wool, Lacoste, Akris, Niccolò Pasqualetti, Jean Paul Gaultier, Magda Butrym, Enfants Riches Déprimés, Ottolinger, and McQueen.
Day 8 (Monday, March 9): Zimmermann, Ungaro, Shiatzy Chen, Gabriela Hearst, Time, Kiko Kostadinov, Abra, Boyarovskaya, Agnes B, and Chanel at 19:00 (13:00 EST).
Day 9 (Tuesday, March 10): Ujoh, Louis Vuitton at 11:30 (5:30 EST), Miu Miu, Florentina Leitner, CFCL, EENK, Litkovska, Situationist, and Pierre Cardin.
This edition arrives as brands navigate economic pressures, with the preview noting the importance of these shows for buyers assessing market reception.