16 Streetwear Brands Like SCRT for Unique Urban Style
You finally found a streetwear brand that matches your energy. The oversized cuts fit right, the graphics actually say something, and the quality holds up wash after wash. Then you open the site one morning and everything in your size is sold out. That's the problem with a brand like SCRT -- when the drops are limited and the demand is real, you can't rely on a single label to build a full rotation.
The good news is that SCRT didn't invent bold graphics and heavyweight cotton on its own. A growing wave of streetwear labels are pushing similar aesthetics, from raw underground energy to polished luxury-meets-street design. Here are 13 brands that belong on your radar if SCRT already lives in your wardrobe.
1. Off-White

Off-White brought high fashion and street culture into the same conversation and refused to let anyone separate them again. The late Virgil Abloh built the label around deconstructed tailoring, industrial-weight quotation marks, and diagonal stripe branding that became instantly recognisable on everything from hoodies to sneaker collaborations. The price point sits well above SCRT, but the shared DNA is clear -- both brands treat graphics as the centrepiece rather than an afterthought.
Where SCRT keeps things accessible and underground, Off-White layers in runway-level construction and editorial presentation. Expect oversized silhouettes in premium fabrics with heavy branding that doesn't apologise for being loud.
Best for: Collectors who want statement streetwear with luxury-tier craftsmanship.
2. A Bathing Ape (BAPE)

BAPE has been shaping streetwear from Tokyo since 1993, and its all-over camo prints and shark-face hoodies remain some of the most recognisable pieces in the game. Every release operates on a limited-drop model, which means owning BAPE feels less like shopping and more like winning. The brand thrives on hype culture and has built a collector community that spans decades.
If you gravitate toward SCRT for its bold visual identity, BAPE takes that concept and cranks the volume even higher with full-body prints and loud colourways. The fits run slightly more structured than SCRT's relaxed cuts, giving each piece a sharper, more deliberate shape.
Best for: Hype-driven collectors who want streetwear with heritage and resale value.
3. Stussy

Before streetwear had a name, Stussy was already doing it. Shawn Stussy started scrawling his signature on surfboards in the early 1980s, and that hand-drawn logo eventually landed on tees, hoodies, and bucket hats that defined an entire generation of casual dressing. The brand pulls from surf, skate, reggae, and hip-hop without ever feeling forced or trend-chasing.
Stussy shares SCRT's graphic-heavy approach but filters it through a sun-faded, California-rooted lens rather than dark urban aesthetics. The construction is solid for the price, and the brand's seasonal collaborations with Nike and Our Legacy keep things fresh without abandoning its roots.
Best for: Fans of graphic-forward streetwear who prefer a laid-back West Coast feel.
4. Heron Preston

Heron Preston took the look of industrial workwear -- high-vis orange, Cyrillic safety text, utilitarian pocketing -- and dropped it straight into the streetwear conversation. Every collection feels like a collaboration between a construction site and a fashion house, blending function-first details with premium fabrics and sharp tailoring. The result is streetwear that looks intentional in a way most graphic-heavy brands never manage.
Both Heron Preston and SCRT understand the power of bold visuals, but where SCRT stays raw and direct, Heron Preston adds a conceptual layer that pushes each piece closer to wearable art. Pricing sits in the mid-to-high range, reflecting the elevated materials and production quality.
Best for: Streetwear fans who want conceptual, workwear-inspired design with a polished edge.
5. Fear of God Essentials

Jerry Lorenzo built Fear of God Essentials as the antidote to logo overload. The line strips streetwear back to its foundations -- oversized hoodies, heavyweight sweatpants, and boxy tees in muted earth tones with nothing more than a small rubber logo to identify the brand. The focus lands entirely on fit, fabric weight, and proportion rather than graphic storytelling.
If SCRT represents the loud side of your wardrobe, Essentials fills the gaps between those statement pieces. The neutral palette and clean construction make it easy to build outfits around bolder items without competing for attention.
Best for: Minimalists who want premium streetwear basics with perfect oversized proportions.
6. Kith

Ronnie Fieg turned Kith from a sneaker boutique into one of the most influential lifestyle brands in streetwear by mastering the art of collaboration. The brand has partnered with everyone from New Balance to BMW, producing limited capsules that sell out within hours. Beyond the collabs, Kith's in-house line delivers clean hoodies, knitwear, and outerwear with a distinctly refined sensibility.
Where SCRT leans into independent, graphic-driven identity, Kith operates at the intersection of sportswear and luxury casual. The quality justifies the higher pricing, and the brand's seasonal drops give your wardrobe a curated, editorial feel that pairs well with louder pieces from labels like SCRT.
Best for: Streetwear enthusiasts who value premium collaborations and lifestyle-oriented design.
7. Y-3

Y-3 exists at the crossroads of athletic performance and avant-garde fashion, born from the long-running partnership between Adidas and Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto. The collections lean dark, architectural, and futuristic -- think draped silhouettes, technical fabrics, and monochromatic palettes that feel closer to a sci-fi film than a typical sportswear drop.
SCRT and Y-3 both push boundaries, but in very different directions. Where SCRT communicates through graphic prints and urban grit, Y-3 speaks through shape and texture. The price point is significantly higher, reflecting Yamamoto's couture-level pattern cutting applied to sneakers, outerwear, and technical layering pieces.
Best for: Forward-thinking dressers who want dark, architectural sportswear with designer pedigree.
8. Daily Paper

Daily Paper emerged from Amsterdam with a mission to weave African cultural heritage into contemporary streetwear design. The brand's founders draw on their roots to create bold prints, rich colour palettes, and graphic motifs that feel genuinely different from the Western-centric streetwear mainstream. Each collection tells a story that connects fashion to identity in a way few competitors attempt.
Like SCRT, Daily Paper puts visuals front and centre, but the inspiration pool runs much deeper -- pulling from traditional patterns, family photography, and diaspora narratives. The construction quality is strong across hoodies, outerwear, and knitted pieces, and the pricing stays accessible compared to many brands on this list.
Best for: Style-conscious buyers looking for culturally rich streetwear with a global perspective.
9. Cactus Plant Flea Market

Cactus Plant Flea Market (CPFM) turns streetwear into a playground. The brand built its reputation on puff-print smiley faces, wobbly hand-drawn typography, and a handmade DIY energy that makes every piece feel like it was created in someone's garage by a genius who doesn't care about fashion rules. Celebrity co-signs from Pharrell and Kid Cudi only added fuel to drops that were already impossible to get.
Where SCRT channels a darker, more rebellious mood, CPFM goes in the opposite direction with bright colours, cartoonish graphics, and an almost childlike sense of play. Both brands reject mainstream blandness, but CPFM does it with a grin rather than a scowl.
Best for: Creative dressers who want playful, limited-edition streetwear with DIY energy.
10. MISBHV

MISBHV grew out of the Polish underground club scene, and that nocturnal energy runs through every collection. The brand specialises in distressed fabrics, gothic-leaning graphics, and silhouettes that feel like they were designed for a warehouse rave at 3am. There's a raw, confrontational quality to the design language that separates it from cleaner streetwear labels.
If you connect with SCRT's rebellious attitude, MISBHV takes that same defiance and pushes it further into avant-garde territory. The brand blends streetwear with elements of fetish fashion and punk, creating pieces that demand attention without relying on recognisable logos or safe colourways.
Best for: Night-culture enthusiasts who want provocative, club-influenced streetwear with edge.
11. Kappa

Kappa carved its identity through European football terraces and early hip-hop culture, and its Omini logo tape running down tracksuit sleeves became one of the most iconic details in sportswear history. The brand delivers retro-influenced tracksuits, tees, and hoodies at accessible price points, making it one of the most affordable entries on this list.
The aesthetic sits in a different lane from SCRT's contemporary graphics, offering instead a nostalgic nod to 1980s and 1990s casual culture. Kappa works best as a wardrobe complement to graphic-heavy brands -- the clean, logo-taped pieces provide a structured contrast to looser, print-driven fits.
Best for: Retro sportswear fans who want affordable, logo-driven pieces rooted in terrace culture.
12. Noah
Noah was founded by Brendon Babenzien, who spent over a decade as creative director at Supreme before launching his own vision. The brand merges skate and surf influences with preppy East Coast sensibilities, producing graphic tees, rugby shirts, and outerwear that feel both countercultural and strangely classic. There's also a genuine commitment to sustainability and social causes that goes beyond marketing copy.
Noah and SCRT overlap in their love for strong graphic design on comfortable silhouettes, but Noah filters everything through a more mature, considered lens. The colour palettes are warmer, the fits are slightly more tailored, and the overall mood is less confrontational and more quietly confident.
Best for: Thoughtful streetwear buyers who want graphic-rich pieces with a conscious, refined edge.
13. Fear of God (Mainline)
While Essentials handles the accessible basics, the Fear of God mainline collection is where Jerry Lorenzo fully expresses his vision of luxury American sportswear. The mainline pieces blend grunge textures, hip-hop proportions, and military-inspired tailoring into garments that feel both monumental and deeply personal. Expect deconstructed outerwear, elongated layering pieces, and denim with proportions you won't find anywhere else.
This is the grown-up evolution of the oversized streetwear silhouette that brands like SCRT popularise at accessible prices. The mainline sits firmly in luxury territory, but the design philosophy -- relaxed fits, bold presence, and zero interest in playing it safe -- connects directly to the same instincts that draw people to SCRT in the first place.
Best for: Luxury-minded streetwear devotees ready to invest in elevated American sportswear design.
Written by
Spencer Lanoue


