Massimo Dutti
Massimo Dutti
Massimo Dutti was founded in 1985 by Armando Lasauca in Barcelona, opening as a menswear label with an Italian-sounding name attached to a Spanish operation. The proposition was simple. Take the codes of European tailoring, wool, cashmere, sober color, and offer them at a price the average urban professional could absorb.
Despite the Italian name, “Massimo Dutti” is not a fashion designer, a fact that early observers latched onto when describing the house, which became widely labeled as a Spanish brand wearing Italian clothing. The name was a marketing instrument, and the early identity took shape around that conceit.
Menswear was the entire brand at the start. When founded in 1985, its product range was limited to menswear, and its women’s range was added in 1995, meaning the first decade of output was dedicated to suits, shirts, knitwear, and outerwear for men.
The design language settled on wool trousers, cotton poplin shirts, fine-gauge merino and cashmere sweaters, blazers cut closer to an Italian shoulder than a British one, and trench coats and field jackets pulled from a familiar European reference set.
Culturally, the brand sat in conversation with names like Brooks Brothers and Hackett on the classic side, and Zegna and Boggi Milano on the Italian side, occupying a price tier below all of them. From the sophistication of personal tailoring with a selection of fabrics such as cotton, hundred per cent wool and cashmere, the house extended into a personal tailoring service that signaled its ambition beyond standard ready-to-wear retail.
The business shifted hands early. In 1991 Inditex acquired 65% of the shares of the company before acquiring it fully in 1995, and the brand became part of the group that also owns Zara, Pull&Bear, and Bershka. Under Inditex, the label expanded into womenswear in 1995 and a children’s line in 2003, and grew into a global retailer.
It now has over 643 stores in more than 78 markets and an online presence in 215 markets, and in 2024, Massimo Dutti generated approximately €1.96 billion in net sales, making it one of Inditex’s strongest non-Zara brands.
Today it dresses urban professionals who want tailoring and natural-fiber basics at a price point sitting between the high street and designer labels, a space often described as masstige or affordable premium, and it functions as the grown-up wardrobe inside the Inditex portfolio.
From the Archive
June 9, 2026
Connor Newall & Jimmy Brighton Chase Hollywood in Massimo Dutti
Massimo Dutti turns the realities of aspiring actors into a portrait of modern ambition and understated style.
June 2, 2026
Massimo Dutti Finds Summer Simplicity on Lanzarote
Henry Rank and Max Knott explore the Canary Island's volcanic terrain in relaxed tailoring, airy knits, and warm-weather essentials.
May 20, 2026
Massimo Dutti Summer 2026 Turns Linen Dressing Into a Lifestyle
Francisco Henriques fronts Massimo Dutti’s “Modern Archetype” summer 2026 edit in relaxed linen tailoring, open-collar shirting, and softened silhouettes.
May 16, 2026
Massimo Dutti Brings Summer 2026 Linen to Mallorca
Yeray Allgayer fronts Massimo Dutti's summer linen outing on Mallorca, arriving alongside the renewed Passeig del Born flagship in Palma.
April 29, 2026
Massimo Dutti Makes the Swim Short the Starting Point of Summer
Massimo Dutti heads to Mallorca and treats the swim short as the one constant, building a full day of dressing upward.
April 13, 2026
Massimo Dutti Maps the Wardrobe at Rest
Massimo Dutti’s “Weekend Off Series” organizes menswear by tempo, dressing four states of mind in suede, linen, and softened tailoring.
April 6, 2026
Massimo Dutti Puts Soft Tailoring to Work for Special Occasions
Massimo Dutti’s summer 2026 style edit stars Kaplan Hani in suits, linen, and relaxed tailoring for special occasions.
March 28, 2026
Massimo Dutti Refines Summer 2026 Leisure with La Playa
Photographed against limestone cliffs and turquoise water, Massimo Dutti presents its spring-summer 2026 collection, La Playa. Models Yeray Allgayer, Kaplan
March 23, 2026
Massimo Dutti Revives the 90s & Gets the Proportions Right
Massimo Dutti takes the 90s back to Rome, and the city makes total sense as a setting. Captured across cobblestoned
March 16, 2026
Massimo Dutti Spring 2026 Gets Italian Craft Exactly Right
Massimo Dutti’s Made in Italy edit for spring 2026 arrives with a thesis: precision is the point. French model Clément