Best Vegan Trainers 2026: A Complete Guide
Nae Vegan ShoesShare
Vegan trainers used to mean canvas. They used to mean compromise — cheap-feeling materials that wore through in a season, or styles that signalled their ethics so loudly nobody else wanted to wear them.
That is not the case in 2026.
The best vegan trainers today are made from genuinely innovative materials — apple waste, pineapple leaves, recycled tennis balls, recycled bottles, premium microfibres — and they are handcrafted in workshops by real people who are paid fairly for their work. They look like trainers. They wear like trainers. The difference is what is not in them: no leather, no animal glues, no shortcuts.
After 18 years of making vegan shoes in Portugal, we have learned what matters when choosing the right pair. This guide covers what to look for, the styles worth knowing about — from low-top minimalists to chunky statement pieces, retro classics, athleisure all-rounders and ballet-inspired everyday styles — and the NAE trainers we recommend across each category.
What makes a trainer truly vegan
A vegan trainer contains no animal-derived materials. That sounds simple, but in practice it is more complicated than most shoppers realise. Many trainers labelled "vegan" still use animal-based glues, dyes or trim. A truly vegan trainer is animal-free at every layer — upper, lining, sole, glue, finish.
There are four things to check before buying:
- The upper. This is what you see — leather alternatives like AppleSkin (made from Italian apple waste), Piñatex (pineapple leaf fibres), recycled microfibres, premium vegan suede, organic cotton or cork.
- The lining and insole. Often where shortcuts hide. Some brands use vegan uppers but animal-based linings. A genuinely vegan trainer uses materials like bamboo lining and cork insole throughout.
- The glue. Traditional shoe glue often contains animal collagen. Quality vegan brands use synthetic adhesives certified animal-free.
- The certification and transparency. Look for PETA-Approved Vegan or Vegan Society certification, and brands that publish full material breakdowns.
What to look for in vegan trainers in 2026
Innovative materials, not just plastic
The first generation of vegan trainers relied heavily on PU and PVC — essentially plastic. They worked, but they were not great for the planet either. The best vegan trainers in 2026 use a different generation of materials:
- AppleSkin — made from apple waste from the Italian juice industry. Soft, supple, breathable, looks remarkably like leather.
- Piñatex — made from pineapple leaf fibres, a by-product of the pineapple harvest. Lightweight, distinctive texture.
- Cork — from sustainably harvested cork forests. Natural, lightweight, antimicrobial — perfect for insoles.
- Recycled tennis balls — yes, really. Used for outsoles. Tough, grippy, gives a second life to a problematic waste stream.
- EcoPure — a 25% recycled premium vegan leather alternative. Looks and feels like premium leather without any animal use.
- Recycled PET microfibres — made from used plastic bottles. Surprisingly soft, breathable and durable.
- Bamboo lining — naturally antibacterial and breathable, replacing leather linings.
Comfort that lasts all day
Vegan trainers used to have a reputation for being stiff or unforgiving. That is largely outdated. The best modern vegan trainers feature memory foam insoles, cork footbeds that mould to your foot, bamboo linings that breathe, and uppers that flex naturally.
When buying online, check whether the brand offers honest sizing guidance and whether real customer reviews mention fit specifically. Reliable brands tell you when a style runs small, large, or true to size.
Durability — yes, vegan trainers can last
This is the question we get asked most often. Are vegan trainers as durable as leather? The honest answer is — it depends on the brand. Cheap vegan trainers, especially fast-fashion versions, often wear through in a season. Quality vegan trainers, properly made with good materials, can last years. Some of our customers are still wearing NAE trainers they bought years ago. The materials matter. The construction matters. The brand's commitment to durability matters.
Who makes the trainer, and how they are treated
Vegan does not automatically mean ethical. A trainer can be technically vegan but produced in a factory with poor working conditions, low wages or unsafe environments.
The geography matters less than people often assume — there are excellent factories in Asia and there are bad factories in Europe. The question is not where the shoe is made. The question is how the people who make it are treated.
Look for brands that are transparent about their production partners. Honest brands will tell you which factory produced your shoes, what the working conditions are like, and whether workers are paid fair wages for the country they live in.
The standard is not a country. It is a set of conditions: fair wages relative to local cost of living, safe working environment, reasonable hours, no child labour, freedom of association. Those should be true everywhere.
NAE vegan trainers worth knowing in 2026
Across our collection, six trainers stand out for their material story, comfort and versatility. Whether you are after a low-top minimalist, a chunky statement piece, a retro classic, an athleisure all-rounder, or a ballet-inspired women's style — there is an option here.
BERLIN — Low-Top Vegan Trainers

Our Berlin trainer is one of the most material-rich shoes in the collection. The upper is AppleSkin — made from apple waste from the Italian juice industry — paired with a Piñatex colour detail in pineapple leaf fibre.
The lining is bamboo for natural breathability. The insole is cork, which moulds to your foot over time. The outsole is made from recycled tennis balls.
A minimalist low-top trainer that works with almost everything — jeans, dresses, tailoring.
KARIO — Premium Low-Top Vegan Trainers (Bestseller)

If Berlin is for the material-curious, Kario is for the design-led. Made from EcoPure — a 25% recycled premium vegan leather alternative — Kario looks and feels like premium leather without any of the cruelty.
It is already one of our bestselling trainers, and it earns its place: clean lines, premium feel, and goes with everything from a suit to denim.
Available in classic black and clean white.
HANOI — Chunky Vegan Trainers

For the chunky trainer fans — the ones who want a trainer that makes a statement — there is Hanoi.
A complex, layered design with a microsuede and mesh upper, both with a percentage of recycled content.
Our most fashion-forward style, and it works with everything from cargo trousers to slip dresses.
SIDNEY — Retro Vegan Trainers (Bestseller)

Sidney is our retro-inspired low top, made from premium vegan suede with contrast detailing on a light grey base.
It hits a sweet spot between sporty and considered — the kind of trainer you wear because it looks effortless, not because it tries hard.
Another bestseller, and one of our most-loved styles.
DAN — Athleisure Vegan Trainers

If you want a trainer that moves with you through the day — commute, errands, evening — Dan is the lightest trainer in our collection.
Built from recycled mesh and other premium materials, it is our athleisure pick: comfortable enough for long walks, considered enough for a coffee date.
Available in all black, in white with blue accents, and in white with yellow accents.
NADIA — Ballet Vegan Trainers (Women's)

I have been wanting a ballet flat in our collection for years. Nadia is finally here, and it is exactly what I imagined — the soft, elegant lines of a ballet shoe, but built like a trainer.
Comfortable enough to wear all day, refined enough to wear with anything.
Made from premium vegan suede.
How to choose the right vegan trainer for you
- How will you wear them? Daily commute, occasional weekend, fashion statement, active lifestyle, ballet-inspired everyday look?
- What materials matter most to you?
- How transparent is the brand?
- What is the brand's track record on quality and responsible production?
Common questions about vegan trainers
Are vegan trainers more expensive than leather?
Quality vegan trainers from ethical brands are typically priced similarly to mid-range leather trainers — around £85–155 for a well-made pair.
How do I clean and care for vegan trainers?
Most modern vegan trainers are easier to care for than leather.
For white trainers especially — Berlin and Kario in white — a proper shoe cleaner makes a real difference.
→ Shop the NAE Shoe Cleaner Kit
Are vegan trainers waterproof?
Some are, some are not. Trainers made from EcoPure or treated AppleSkin tend to be water-resistant.
Can vegan trainers be repaired or recycled?
This depends on the brand. NAE offers a Pre-Loved programme where worn shoes can be returned for cleaning, restoration and resale.
Walking forward in 2026
The best vegan trainers in 2026 are not a compromise. They are better designed, more comfortable and more interesting than many leather alternatives.
At NAE, we have been making vegan shoes since 2008. That is eighteen years of refining how to build a trainer that is beautiful, durable and genuinely good.
Whether your next pair is a low-top Berlin in apple and pineapple, a premium Kario in EcoPure, a chunky Hanoi statement, a retro Sidney classic, a lightweight Dan, or an elegant ballet-inspired Nadia — we would love to help you find them.