Originally Polo, Polo Ralph Lauren is the line Ralph Lauren launched in 1967 in New York with a collection of men’s neckties, expanding into his first full menswear collection the following year. The name came from the sport, chosen for its associations with English country leisure and old American money, and it has framed the label’s reference points ever since.
From its first season, Polo expanded beyond ties into shirts, sport coats, slacks, and suits, pulling roughly equally from British country dress, Ivy League tailoring, and American sportswear. The 1972 cotton mesh Polo shirt, with its small embroidered pony logo, became the line’s signature garment and one of the most recognizable pieces of American clothing produced in the twentieth century.
The vocabulary has stayed consistent across five decades. Oxford-cloth button-downs, cricket sweaters, tweed sport coats, cable knits, chinos, repp-stripe ties, tartan trousers, and the recurring nautical and equestrian motifs all run through the line season after season.
Polo sits in the middle of Ralph Lauren Corporation’s price ladder, below Purple Label tailoring and the runway Collection, and above the diffusion lines that followed. Its department store presence, especially through Bloomingdale’s and later Macy’s and Nordstrom, gave the label a national reach that few American designer brands have matched.
Polo Sport launched in 1992 as a performance and casual offshoot, sitting closer to the streetwear conversation that the Lo Lifes had already opened up in Brooklyn.
The line’s cultural footprint is wider than its retail position suggests. Hip-hop adopted Polo through the 1990s, from Raekwon and the Wu-Tang Clan to Kanye West’s later College Dropout-era styling, and the vintage Polo market that grew out of that adoption is now a substantial collector economy of its own.
Country club shoppers and Brooklyn collectors browse the same archive, often looking for the same Snow Beach pullover or 1992 stadium jacket. That double readership is the position Polo has occupied longer than any other American menswear label, and the line continues to produce new versions of its core pieces while reissuing pieces from its archive for the collectors who track them by year.
From the Archive
June 17, 2026
Polo Ralph Lauren Pulls Its Essentials Into the Open Air
Ralph Lauren surrounds its latest underwear styles with sun, surf, and an enduring American fantasy.
May 20, 2026
Ralph Lauren Spring 2026 Sharpens the Fantasy of Affluent Escape
David Sims photographs Ralph Lauren’s spring-summer 2026 campaign across sailboats, coastal roads, and whitewashed villas, bringing Polo, Purple Label, and Polo Sport together.
September 30, 2025
Polo Ralph Lauren Takes to Tokyo with Friends & Great Style
Polo Ralph Lauren’s new project, Polo Originals and Friends, gathers working creatives in Tokyo to show how Polo’s menswear plays
August 26, 2025
Polo Ralph Lauren Heritage Icons Channel Classic Collegiate
Polo Ralph Lauren’s fall 2025 Heritage Icons campaign places the brand’s signature aesthetic back on familiar ground. New York stands
May 20, 2025
Polo Ralph Lauren’s Heritage Icons Channel West Village Cool
Polo Ralph Lauren introduces its Heritage Icons collection with a clear nod to New York’s West Village, where tradition and
January 13, 2025
Polo Ralph Lauren Embraces Soft Suits & Bold Hues
Polo Ralph Lauren’s pre-spring 2025 collection champions refined sportswear. Earthy tones dominate herringbone suits and double-breasted blazers, elevating soft tailoring
December 4, 2024
Lando Norris Brings Racing Edge to Polo Red Campaign
Lando Norris accelerates into the spotlight as the face of Polo Red, a Ralph Lauren fragrance that mirrors his adrenaline-fueled
November 11, 2024
Polo Ralph Lauren Rings in the Holidays with Vibrant Knits
Polo Ralph Lauren launches into the holiday season, spotlighting its signature cable-knit sweaters in vivid colors. Layered with winter mainstays,

