New Balance running shoe sneaker
Photograph ©2017 by Brian Cohen.

In Which Countries Would You Pay The Most For Classic Sneakers?

...and in which countries would you pay the least for classic sneakers?

Sneakers are among the most comfortable types of shoes one can wear when traveling around the world through airports and exploring cities, states, countries, and continents. They are quiet — hence the word sneakers — and they can help the feet endure less wear and tear with each step…

…but in which countries would you pay the most for classic sneakers?

The most influential sneakers around the world were shortlisted with the help of articles such as this one and this one. Shortlist in hand, sneaker prices from the official brand web sites in every country available were gathered. Lastly, they were calculated as a percentage of the monthly average wage using The World Bank’s ‘adjusted net national income per capita’ data to work out the affordability of each shoe around the globe.

This article — which was written by Barbara Davidson from SavingSpot — gives more details about in which countries one can expect to pay the most for classic sneakers; and I have been given express written permission to use the maps and the verbatim text from the aforementioned article in this article. While SavingSpot has endeavored to ensure the information provided is accurate and current, it cannot guarantee it. Neither SavingSpot nor The Gate accept liability for the information which is presented in this article.

In Which Countries Would You Pay The Most For Classic Sneakers?

To the sneakerhead, unboxing a pair of legendary shoes is a delicate ritual. New sneakers are more than footwear: they are your lovechild, your deity, an expression of your passion. Son, father, and holy ghost.

Classic sneaker guru Michael Sykes agrees that new sneakers can be more about identity than fashion. Aged 15, Sykes worked a bunch of dull teenage jobs, toiling to “scrounge up enough change to buy a pair of Aqua Jordan 8 shoes.”

“That was the first sneaker I bought with my own money, and it was so liberating,” explains Sykes. “I felt fly, but more importantly, I felt proud of myself. I’d set a goal to get these shoes, and I reached it.”

While carefully curated sneakers are a status symbol (and also an investment opportunity), they are not a statement about wealth. Sneakers are symbols of style, knowledge, commitment, community. If you can find your coveted shoe at cut-rate prices, all the better.

So, now that cheap travel and online shopping mean you’re no longer restricted to your local store, CashNetUSA wondered if it’s worth ordering your legendary sneakers from a far-flung land.

We shortlisted the world’s most influential sneakers and mapped their prices using the official brand websites in every country where they’re available. We also calculated how affordable each shoe is around the world using the World Bank’s monthly average wage data – and you can compare international affordability using the chart at the bottom.

Puma Suedes

The tactile Puma Suede was launched as the Crack (i.e., the ‘best’) ahead of the 1968 Olympics in Mexico. Puma intended athletes to wear the shoe on the podium with the first-ever Puma tracksuit. Its special shell sole was suitable for basketball. Puma later renamed the Crack for Walt “Clyde” Frazier – who asked for a new color for every game (supposedly wearing over 390 different hues). The Puma Clyde became the Suede after Frazier’s contract ran out and soon became one of the definitive hip-hop sneakers.

a map of the world with orange and white text
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

Brazil is home to the cheapest Suedes – a snip at $69.17. But American sneakerheads also get a treat with the second-cheapest price of $70. There are four territories where the Puma Suede costs over a hundred bucks, and they’re all in Europe: Ukraine, Sweden, Switzerland, and the world’s number one, Denmark ($111.69).

Adidas Stan Smiths

The Stan Smith was first named after Robert Haillet, a French tennis player handpicked for sponsorship by the son of Adi Dassler. The shoe was already booming due to the high-tech edge the leather upper and herringbone rubber sole gave on the court. But it became a bona fide classic on the feet of Stan Smith, an American legend in the making who took over after Haillet’s retirement. This sneaker’s simple but effective appeal is universal, with famous ambassadors including Jay-Z and Pharrell Williams. “I wish I’d kept the first ones,” Smith recently told Esquire.

a map of the world with numbers and text
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

This American icon costs $85 in its home country, the third-lowest in the world – pipped by Brazil ($78.87) and Peru ($67.15). Argentina serves up a doozy with the most expensive Stan Smiths in the world ($178.09), practically $40 more than second-placed Indonesia ($138.32).

Nike Air Force 1s

The AF1 was a practical basketball design that happened to look fly. The shoe had two early boosts: an iconic 1982 photoshoot with Moses Malone, Michael Cooper, Jamaal Wilkes, Bobby Jones, Mychal Thompson, and Calvin Natt; and a brainwave by three Baltimore sneaker store owners to request exclusives from Nike. The shoe became a cult hit in Baltimore. The obsessive fandom it generated saved the AF1 from being dropped – allowing it to become a hip-hop talisman in the ‘90s and inhabit a wide range of colorways in the 21st century.

a map of the world with numbers and text
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

The US has the privilege of the cheapest AF1s at $90. However, if your variety of choice is over the border in Mexico, you won’t break the bank with an asking price of $111.22. Argentina shoots for the hoop with an astonishing $204.26 price tag. There are also three countries with shoes for a slice over $150: Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Switzerland.

Converse Chuck Taylor All-Stars

1917. That’s when this shoe was born. Sure, it didn’t get its name until 1932, when basketball player and Converse employee/enthusiast Charles H. Taylor got his name emblazoned on the ankle. But 1917! Converse had previously focused on making rain boots and intended their All-Star to be “wholesome.” But, like the Stan Smith, the normcore design was widely transferable, later adored by punks, rappers, and skaters. And all this despite the fact that, until the Chuck II (nearly 100 years after the original All-Star), the thing wasn’t even comfortable to wear.

a map of the world with different countries/regions
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

A pair of Chucks will set you back just $48.37 in South Korea. Canada, the US, and the UK don’t charge much more. But in general, Chuck Taylor All-Stars are not an expensive shoe: Australia has the priciest ($89.93), and second-placed Denmark is significantly cheaper than that, at $76.83.

Nike Air Jordan 1s

Michael Jordan didn’t like Nike. He liked to play in Converse Chucks. But Nike liked Mike. They convinced him they could make a more ‘Chuck-ish’ basketball shoe and create a Michael Jordan megabrand. He agreed. Nike’s next move was to capitalize on an urban myth that the NBA fined Jordan $5,000 every time he played in his black and red Jordans because they broke league uniform rules. This wasn’t strictly true, but folks love an outlaw, and the first Air Jordan 1 – nicknamed the ‘Banned’ – sold out at a then-expensive $65 per box.

a map of the world with shoes
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

Taking inflation into account, $90 isn’t much for a pair of Jordans in the US in 2021 – in fact, it’s the cheapest in the world and the only country where they cost under a hundred bucks. Argentina is, again, the priciest, billing more than twice the American tag at $187.65.

Adidas Superstars

While Nike tends to offer ‘Christmas tree’ sneakers adorned with striking flourishes and innovations, Adidas’s vintage feel and basic three-stripe logo allows for legendary shoes that your uncool dad might buy by accident. The Superstar is no exception. In 1969, Adidas’s second basketball shoe was a leather rebuff to the fast-dating canvas Converse. Within half a decade, three-quarters of the NBA were playing in the Superstar. In the 1980s, Run-DMC took the baton and ran with it, signing a sponsorship deal after bigging up the brand in song and in concert (check this footage!).

a map of the world with numbers and a compass
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

Peruvian Superstars are the world’s cheapest, retailing at $70.53 – fifteen bucks less than in the US. Japan ($147.15), Argentina ($145.84), and India ($147.15) charge twice the price of the world’s cheapest Adidas Superstars.

New Balance 574s

New Balance is hardly a perennial favorite – but it is a modern classic. The brand has rebounded as a sneakerhead must-have and popular seller after decades of being a bit uncool. But the 1988 574 has been a bit of a pot-boiler all along, combining comfort with a graphic style that promotes colorway innovation. In fact, the 574 was originally created as a cheaper, simpler mass-market trainer. But like other classics, this made it a ‘shoe of the people,’ and it was only a matter of time before the brand would click into place. Bonus fact: the manufacturer started in 1906 as the New Balance Arch Support Company, creating shoes inspired by the poise and elegance of chickens.

a map of the world with numbers and a shoe
Click on the map for an enlarged view. Source: SavingSpot.

Once more, Peru is the cheapest territory for this classic shoe ($72.67). This time, Peru is followed by the US and Venezuela, tied on $79.99. But there’s a new entrant at the expensive end of the table: Russian 574s are the most expensive in the world, at $188.03 – over 30 bucks more than second-place New Zealand.

An Affordable Sneakers Index

Absolute price tags are one thing, but how much does it cost to buy these shoes compared to local wages? We used World Bank data to figure it out. Use this table to find how your favorite sneakers measure up in different currencies. You’ll find, for example, the US has the most affordable Jordans, costing just 1.95% of the average monthly wage.

Final Boarding Call

Soles running shoe New Balance
Most of the wear and tear on this running shoe — whose sole separated from the rest of the shoe — was from walking in Helsinki, Tallinn, Riga, and Vilnius. Photograph ©2017 by Brian Cohen.

The fashion style of many male travel, miles, and points bloggers seems to be a sport jacket, button down shirt without a tie, slacks, and penny loafers or shoes. My fashion style is jeans, a T-shirt, and sneakers; and it has always been that way since my adolescent years — although I went from primarily blue jeans to primarily black jeans somewhere along the way…

…so you can imagine how disappointed I was when after having just finished my second day of exploring Vilnius in Lithuania, I retired to my room at the hotel property and decided to remove my running shoes off of my feet — only to find that the soles separated from both of the running shoes.

Let us just say that I almost found out personally how much a new pair of sneakers cost in Lithuania.

Fortunately, my experience had a happy ending

All photographs ©2017 by Brian Cohen.

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