16 Streetwear Brands Like Scuffers for Urban Style
Your Scuffers rotation is solid, but you keep seeing the same designs on every other person at the park. You want that graphic-heavy, oversized energy without feeling like you ordered from the same Instagram ad as everyone else.
These 13 brands deliver the same bold, comfort-first streetwear that drew you to Scuffers. From skate-rooted originals to hype-driven drops, each one brings its own attitude to oversized tees, statement hoodies, and the kind of pieces that turn heads on the street.
Supreme

Supreme turned a Lafayette Street skate shop into the most recognized name in streetwear. The red box logo triggers instant recognition worldwide, and Thursday drops still crash servers decades after the brand launched. Collaborations with Nike and The North Face consistently produce pieces that spike in value the moment they sell out.
Pricing runs $50 to $300 at retail, which is a step up from Scuffers, but the real cost is competing with bots and resellers for access. If you love Scuffers' graphic-forward boldness and want to chase the thrill of limited drops with genuine street credibility behind them, Supreme is the benchmark.
Best for: Hype enthusiasts willing to play the drop game for legendary street credibility.
Palace

Palace runs on dry British humor and genuine skate roots. Founded by Lev Tanju in London, the Tri-Ferg logo became instantly recognizable through lo-fi skate videos that double as comedy sketches. Collections land with relaxed fits, vintage-inspired graphics, and a playful attitude that never takes itself too seriously.
Expect to pay $40 to $150, placing it just above Scuffers territory. Seasonal hoodies use heavyweight cotton fleece with embroidered logos and boxy cuts that sit right on skaters. Size up if you're used to American brands because Palace runs UK-sized and slightly smaller across the board.
Best for: Skaters who want graphic-heavy streetwear with European wit.
Nike SB

Nike SB channels skateboarding culture through the lens of the world's biggest sportswear company. The Dunk and Janoski became pavement staples, but the full apparel line holds its own with tees and hoodies designed for sessions at the park and worn long after.
Tees hover around $50 and sneakers often hit $120, backed by Nike's athletic engineering and global distribution. You get the same skate-inspired energy that makes Scuffers appealing, plus the durability and innovation that come with decades of sportswear development behind every piece.
Best for: Skate culture fans who want performance backing their street style.
Obey

Obey was born from Shepard Fairey's street art movement, turning activism and visual provocation into wearable statements. Every graphic tee carries intention behind it, mixing social commentary with striking prints that go beyond decoration. The brand built its reputation on walls before it ever touched fabric.
Pricing sits at $30 to $100, landing right alongside Scuffers in terms of accessibility. Where Scuffers goes bold with its branding, Obey goes bold with meaning. The result is statement-heavy streetwear that says something about you beyond your taste in logos.
Best for: Graphic tee collectors who want art and activism in their wardrobe.
Kith

Kith blends urban roots with a refined, almost luxurious finish that elevates everyday streetwear. Founded by Ronnie Fieg in New York, the brand mastered the art of collaboration, partnering with everyone from New Balance to Coca-Cola on pieces that merge nostalgia with premium craftsmanship.
Prices start around $50 and climb past $250 for outerwear and collaboration pieces. Think of it as Scuffers' more polished older sibling. The casual comfort is there, but the fabrics feel heavier, the construction tighter, and the overall aesthetic leans toward a cleaner, upscale direction.
Best for: Streetwear fans ready to level up without losing the casual edge.
HUF

HUF grew out of San Francisco's skateboarding scene and stayed rooted there. The brand became a global name through logo-heavy hoodies, bold graphic tees, and those famous Plantlife socks that became a cultural marker of their own. Founder Keith Hufnagel built it on authentic skate credibility that still runs through every collection.
Falling directly into the $20 to $80 range, HUF matches Scuffers on price point while delivering that pure, skate-centric aesthetic. This is one of the most accessible alternatives on this list, and the laid-back urban culture baked into every piece makes it feel genuine rather than manufactured.
Best for: Budget-conscious skaters who want authentic roots without the markup.
Anti Social Social Club

Anti Social Social Club built an entire empire on one wavy logo and the power of social media virality. ASSC thrives on minimalist provocation, printing its name across hoodies and tees in a way that turned introvert culture into a fashion statement. The brand is proof that a strong visual identity can carry a label further than most full collections.
With prices from $40 to $120, ASSC shares Scuffers' commitment to bold branding but strips everything else back to the essentials. Where Scuffers fills its designs with graphics, ASSC lets the logo do all the talking. Expect long shipping times on drops, which remains part of the brand's polarizing reputation.
Best for: Logo-driven minimalists who want hype without the visual clutter.
The Hundreds

The Hundreds is one of streetwear's most reliable veterans, deeply rooted in LA skate and hip-hop culture since 2003. The iconic bomb logo Adam became a symbol of West Coast street authenticity, while the brand consistently delivers hoodies and tees that feel like they belong on Venice Beach boardwalks.
Sitting in the $30 to $80 range alongside Scuffers, The Hundreds offers strong value with a vintage-inspired, laid-back West Coast attitude. Co-founder Bobby Hundreds also built a media platform around the brand, creating a community that feels earned rather than bought. If you want street authenticity at an honest price, this is it.
Best for: West Coast streetwear fans who value community and heritage brands.
BAPE

BAPE made Japanese streetwear a global phenomenon through signature camo patterns, the ape head logo, and Shark hoodies with full-zip faces. A Bathing Ape turned Tokyo's Harajuku district into a streetwear pilgrimage site, and the brand's playful maximalism influenced an entire generation of graphic-heavy labels worldwide.
Pricing runs steep at $100 to $500 and beyond, putting it in a different financial bracket than Scuffers. But if you love statement graphics and want the legendary, high-end version of that bold visual energy, BAPE represents the peak. BAPESTA sneakers alone command attention that most brands spend years trying to build.
Best for: Collectors who want iconic Japanese streetwear with maximum visual impact.
Stussy

Stussy pioneered the bridge between surf culture, skate culture, and urban fashion back in the 1980s. The hand-drawn script logo became one of streetwear's most enduring symbols, and the brand never chased hype cycles. Instead, it built a reputation on relaxed fits, dependable quality, and a California attitude that ages well.
At $30 to $120, Stussy occupies the same approachable territory as Scuffers but brings decades of heritage credibility. The collections trade hyper-trendy graphics for timeless designs that still look good years after purchase. For anyone who wants an OG label with proven staying power, Stussy is the foundation of any streetwear rotation.
Best for: Streetwear purists who prefer heritage credibility over passing trends.
Fear of God Essentials

Fear of God Essentials mastered the art of elevated basics by stripping streetwear down to its most wearable core. Jerry Lorenzo designed the line around neutral palettes, relaxed oversized silhouettes, and premium fabrics that make sweats and hoodies feel intentional rather than lazy. The rubber logo patch became a quiet status symbol.
Essentials pieces run $40 to $150, making luxury-grade comfort surprisingly accessible. If you gravitate toward Scuffers' relaxed fits but want to swap bold graphics for a more refined, tonal aesthetic, this line delivers. The heavyweight fleece and thoughtful proportions justify the price for anyone building a cohesive, minimal wardrobe.
Best for: Minimalists who want luxury comfort without the loud branding.
Kappa

Kappa rode the retro sportswear wave back into relevance with its famous Omini logo taping running down the sides of everything. The Italian brand built its name on tracksuits and soccer-inspired jerseys before streetwear adopted it, giving Kappa an authenticity that newer athleisure labels can only imitate.
Sharing that accessible $30 to $80 price bracket with Scuffers, Kappa brings a distinctly European, sport-influenced edge to casual streetwear. The tracksuits have become a signature look in hip-hop and grime scenes, while logo tees offer an easy entry point. If you want the athletic side of street style with genuine vintage credibility, Kappa delivers.
Best for: Retro sportswear fans who want European athletic heritage on a budget.
Off-White
Off-White redefined what streetwear could become at its highest level. The late Virgil Abloh built the brand on deconstructed designs, industrial zip ties, and signature quotation marks that turned ordinary garments into cultural talking points. His ability to bridge high fashion and street culture changed the entire industry.
With prices starting around $200 and climbing fast, Off-White operates in a completely different financial league than Scuffers. But it represents the ceiling of where graphic-heavy, statement-driven streetwear can go. For anyone who sees Scuffers as a starting point and wants to understand the high-fashion end of that same creative spectrum, Abloh's legacy brand is essential viewing.
Best for: Fashion-forward buyers who want luxury streetwear with conceptual depth.


Written by
Spencer Lanoue


