In Las Vegas, the musician pulled together a fit straight from the ’90s menswear playbook.
Bad Bunny is a high frequenter of awards ceremonies and he’s got one of the best track records in the business when it comes to red carpet attire that subverts, sharpens or adds some theatrics to the status quo.
However, he’s also partial to paring it back – taking low-profile suits for a spin and wearing them as effortlessly as he picks up musical wins. Last night, in Las Vegas, the mega star picked up five Latin Grammys, and it was his certified formula for relaxed and assured tailoring that he turned to for his victory lap. This meant a swishy double-breasted suit chilled out with a white Shapes USA ball cap and a shirt worn sans-tie. To round out the look, Bad Bunny wore a pair of polished, black leather boots.
Vibes-wise, it’s straight from the ’90s, and the traditional and more structured double-breasted suit feels easy and thrown-on, while still looking considered. It’s low-effort and doesn’t require too much heavy lifting. As for the fine-tuning, Bad Bunny knows how to deploy an accessory, like last night’s Tiffany & Co. brooch and sturdy blacked-out aviators.

Via Getty
We’ve seen the musician rock the ball cap and suit combination before, like at the Grammys in 2023, for the Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary special in February, and at Calvin Klein’s Autumn/Winter 2025 runway show. It’s a move pulled from the 1990s famous guy playbook, rocked by guys like Denzil Washington, Robin Williams, and JFK Junior pre-millennium.
Taking an item that traditionally lands in the sportswear camp, and throwing it in the mix with a pillar of classic menswear like the suit is ballsy. It shouldn’t work, but does, and the intentional clashing feels both sharp and dressed-down. And for Bad Bunny, a flagbearer of ’90s-style oversized menswear in 2025, it works a charm on the red carpet.
So if you’re looking for a suit that feels both chill and considered, you don’t need to think too hard. Bad Bunny has mastered the formula that hits every time.
Images via Getty










