’80s-Era Leather Bombers Are the Season’s It Coat Trend

The style took off during Fashion Month but has legs to last through winter and spring.

Images of brown and black leather bomber jackets from Saint Laurent Spring 2025 runway show, Hailey Bieber wearing a brown leather bomber jacket, and Bella Hadid wearing a black leather bomber jacket.
(Image credit: Saint Laurent/Backgrid/Getty Images)

We have lift-off: a leather bomber jacket trend is flying high, cruising across the fashion circuit with no sign of descent.

It’s rare for fashion folks to come together and co-sign one silhouette as the best leather jacket of the season. The leather outerwear market is typically a mixed bag; fashion purists are partial to classic moto jackets, while prepsters defend their leather blazers as if they’re still active in their high school debate club. But the season's best leather bomber jackets bring the style set together in a rare moment of unity to agree that, without question, the aviator style is a fall 2024 trend with enough momentum to carry through as a winter and spring 2025 trend, too.

Fashion Month street style—always an incubator for the pieces everyone else will soon be wearing—was the first sign that the bomber trend was here for the long haul. During Milan Fashion Week, Marie Claire’s editor-in-chief, Nikki Ogunnaike, wore her tailored black bomber to runway shows at Gucci, Ferragamo, and Prada. In New York, Jalil Johnson, a street style star with a discerning eye for It pieces, “fell somewhat head over heels” for the Auralee bomber that Puck fashion journalist Lauren Sherman wore to the Tory Buch show—so much so that Johnson snagged a similar L.L.Bean style on a secondhand site a few days later.

A woman at Paris Fashion Week wears a brown leather bomber jacket with a gray mini skirt.

An up-close look at a camel-colored leather bomber jacket seen on a Paris Fashion Week guest.

(Image credit: Launchmetrics)

Then came Bella Hadid, who endorsed the bomber jacket trend at Paris Fashion Week a few short days later, with stylist Molly Dickson putting the supermodel in a big and baggy Saint Laurent style.

Bella Hadid is seen leaving her hotel on September 24, 2024 in Paris, France.

Hadid in her Saint Laurent leather bomber a few days ahead of hitting the fashion house's runway.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Hadid's off-duty outfit was a sneak peek at what would come in Saint Laurent's Spring 2025 show (and a nudge-nudge, wink-wink for Hadid's impending return to the runway). Creative director Anthony Vaccarello expressed his fondness for an '80s-era leather bomber jacket by iterating on the silhouette in matte black and brown leather and caramel suede, pairing it with supersized suits and bohemian maxi dresses.

Four Saint Laurent Spring 2025 runway looks featuring leather bomber jackets: a woman in a gray suit with a black leather bomber jacket; woman in green skirt with a blue top and brown leather bomber jacket; woman wearing a brown suit and brown leather bomber jacket; and a woman in a green dress with a black leather bomber jacket.

Anthony Vaccarello's various bomber jackets in black and brown leather his Spring 2025 runway.

(Image credit: Launchmetrics)

Vaccarello's leather jacket outfits on the Paris runway were surprising and fresh, signaling that this take on the bomber jacket trend was about making a familiar favorite feel new enough for the now.

His rogue stylings seemingly became a reference for Hailey Bieber, who continues to wear leather bombers as an unexpected top layer in her fall fashion. Bieber paired her Saint Laurent leather jacket with yoga pants and kitten heels for a recent church service (yes, you read that correctly), with wide-leg leather trousers for a sushi date with Justin Bieber, and in a very autumnal all-chocolate-brown outfit earlier in October.

Hailey Bieber in a brown leather bomber jacket and tan pants takes a well-deserved break from their parental duties, indulging in a relaxing spa session at Pellequr Luxury Spa.

Bieber in a baggy brown bomber in late October.

(Image credit: Backgrid)

Before it was a see-now, buy-now fall jacket fashion editors and stars were fawning over, the leather bomber was a piece of utility outerwear designed in the 1910s to keep U.S. Air Force fighter pilots warm. From then on, the silhouette has circulated throughout the mainstream and formed a well-rounded fan club, becoming a favorite of 1950s rockabillies, 1980s punks, and now, 2024’s crowd of cool girls—perhaps inspired by her best friend Bieber, Kendall Jenner just wore a bomber jacket made of puffed-up, dark chocolate-colored leather for a night out in mid-November.

The lesson here, as presented by Bieber, Jenner, Vaccarello, and the bomber-clad cohort at Fashion Month, is that the rugged jacket works in any context you want it to. Because, like those who wear it, a leather bomber is limitless in its versatility. On top of a cashmere sweater and tailored maxi skirt, it provides a just-right amount of edge. With a floral, Saint Laurent-style maxi dress, a leather bomber is so wrong that it becomes right (you've heard of TikTok’s “wrong shoe theory;” now, get ready for the “wrong jacket theory”).

A woman wearing a tan leather bomber jacket, white pants, black shoes, black sunglasses, and a brown bag at London Fashion Week Spring 2025.

A caramel-colored high-neck leather bomber paired with ivory baggy trousers at London Fashion Week.

(Image credit: Launchmetrics)

Unlike a moto jacket or leather blazer—which come with strong style connotations that can sway an outfit one way or another (the former, a hit-the-highway biker; the latter, a prep school dropout)—a leather bomber jacket is more of a vibe-shifter. You're the plane's pilot, with an entire runway to pick up speed. And the best fashion trends are always the ones that let you stay in control.

Emma Childs
Fashion Features Editor

Emma is the fashion features editor at Marie Claire, where she explores the intersection of style and human interest storytelling. She covers viral styling tips—like TikTok's "Olsen Tuck" and Substack's "Shirt Sandwiches"—and has written dozens of runway-researched trend reports about the ready-to-wear silhouettes, shoes, bags, and colors to shop for each season. Above all, Emma enjoys connecting with real people to discuss all facets of fashion, from picking a designer's brain to speaking with stylists, entertainers, artists, and C-suite executives about how to find a personal style as you age and reconnect with your clothes postpartum.

Emma also wrote for The Zoe Report, Editorialist, Elite Daily, Bustle, and Mission Magazine. She studied Fashion Studies and New Media at Fordham University Lincoln Center and launched her own magazine, Childs Play Magazine, in 2015 as a creative pastime. When Emma isn't waxing poetic about niche fashion discourse on the internet, you'll find her stalking eBay for designer vintage, reading literary fiction on her Kindle, doing hot yoga, and "psspsspssp-ing" at bodega cats.