Men's Race Day Suits
Race day ready, born ready in Percival Men's race day suits. Suits for the day, the home stretch and beyond. Stylish, comfortable not stiff, linen and seersucker summer suits for the Royal Ascot trot, Cheltenham jam, Melbourne cup... yes. Check for a parlay wager win with the Percival outfit (suit) builder.
Why does race day attire matter?
Race day sits at the intersection of sport and social ritual, whether that’s Cheltenham Festival with mud on your brogues or Henley Regatta with blazers lining the riverbank. Each event carries its own pace and expectations, and race day attire is how you demonstrate you understand the setting. Nothing distracts from the precision of an F1 pit lane quite like someone in a bargain-bin polyester shirt quietly losing a battle with their own armpits.

What is the best race day suit for men
The best race day suit for men? A tailored three-piece. No debate. Racing is theatre and a waistcoat understands the script. It sharpens the torso, cleans up the line, and keeps you looking composed when the jacket comes off after the third “confident” tip of the day.
“But Perci, it’s going to be boiling hot. What should I do?” Simple. We’ve developed a groundbreaking seasonal ventilation system that transforms your three-piece into a two-piece in seconds. It’s called removing the waistcoat. Revolutionary stuff.
Which fabrics are best for race day outfits?
Race day attire lives and dies on breathability and layering. Premium linen leads when the sun shows up. Cotton does the same heavy lifting, especially in seersucker, where the puckered weave keeps air moving instead of trapping it. Lyocell is a modern, plant-based fibre known for its silk-like handle, lending tailoring that understated Italian-boardroom polish. Merino wool and chunky cord cover the cooler meetings. Fit matters just as much as fabric; excess material means excess heat, excess creasing, excess regret. Let the cloth do its job.
How should a race day suit fit?
A race day suit should fit closer and cleaner than a standard office suit. The shoulders must sit on the natural shoulder line with no overhang, the chest should button without pulling, and the waist should taper for definition rather than hang straight. A three piece adds form and keeps the line sharp if the jacket comes off, like the composed build of a jockey before the off. A two piece suit is less formal for warmer fixtures but still leagues ahead of a limp grey polyester effort. Do not be that guy. Precision in fit is what separates race day tailoring from everyday suiting.
Which colours work best for race day attire?
Colour comes down to personal preference, but some shades are simply stronger on the turf and track. Forest Green. Navy Blue. Light Blue. Cream. Brown. Trust us. They work.
Last year in Monaco, the entire Sky F1 commentary panel moved as one in linen tones, soft pink, pale blue, light neutrals, all sun-ready and sharp against the harbour backdrop. The point is not to overthink it. Choose a colour with intent. Step away from flat grey and routine black. Race day is not the moment to play small.










































































































































































































































