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Gurkha
Trousers

The trouser with a built-in belt. What Gurkha trousers are, where they came from, and how to wear the most characterful trouser in the wardrobe.

The case for Gurkha

A trouser that holds itself up, and holds your attention.

The Gurkha trouser is a high-rise, pleated trouser closed by its own integrated waistband: two buckled straps that cinch the waist with no need for a belt. It came from military dress uniform and was adopted by tailors for exactly the reason it still works. It looks considered from the waist up and comfortable from the waist down.

It is the trouser for men who have the basics and want one with character. The double pleats give room, the high rise lengthens the leg, and the buckled waist is a detail people notice without quite knowing why. Worn with a plain knit polo, it does all the talking.

High rise. Double pleat. No belt required.

Brown linen Gurkha trousers showing the buckled high waist
The detail

The waist that needs no belt.

Two buckled straps cinch the waist and finish the line. It is the detail that separates a Gurkha from an ordinary pleated trouser, and the reason it looks considered before you have added anything else.

Read CloselyThe Gurkha, Anatomywhat makes it a Gurkha
01The waistAn integrated waistband with two buckled straps. No belt, ever.
02The riseHigh. It sits at the natural waist and lengthens the leg.
03The pleatsDouble forward pleats for room and drape.
04The lineFull through the thigh, clean to the hem. Never tapered tight.
05The fabricLinen or a linen blend, so it stays cool under the structure.
06The colourSand, brown, charcoal, sage. Earthy and muted.
Gurkha vs an ordinary trouser
Belted trouser

Needs a belt to close, breaks the line at the waist, and looks like every other trouser.

Gurkha trouser

Closes with its own buckled waistband, keeps a clean line, and reads as considered before you say a word.

vs
In SummerHow to Wear Themlet the trouser lead
Day / lunch, walking, warm

Sand Gurkhas, a cream knit polo tucked, loafers. The waist detail does the work, so keep the top plain.

Evening / sharper, still relaxed

Charcoal Gurkhas, a navy knit polo, loafers. Sharper, still relaxed, still no belt.

Weekend / character, kept quiet

Brown or sage Gurkhas, a striped polo, clean trainers. Character up top and down below, kept in one muted palette.

Where to StartThe Gurkhas to Buyin stock, earthy, in linen
Gurkha Trousers, Sand
01 / The everyday
Gurkha Trousers, Sand
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Gurkha Trousers, Brown
02 / The character
Gurkha Trousers, Brown
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Gurkha Trousers, Charcoal
03 / The sharp one
Gurkha Trousers, Charcoal
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Browse all Gurkha and linen trousers and pair them with a knit polo.

A Gurkha trouser is tucked, so it wants a plain top. Let the waist be the only detail in the room.

One rule

Tuck the top in. The whole point of a Gurkha is the high, buckled waist, and a shirt left out hides it. A plain knit polo tucked into sand or charcoal Gurkhas is the entire look, and it needs nothing else.

Questions
What are Gurkha trousers?
Gurkha trousers are high-rise, pleated trousers closed by an integrated waistband with two buckled straps, so they need no belt. The design comes from the dress uniform of Gurkha regiments and was adopted by tailors for its clean waist and comfortable, roomy cut. They are among the most characterful trousers in menswear.
How do you wear Gurkha trousers?
Tuck a plain top in so the buckled waist shows, and keep everything else simple. A knit polo or linen shirt with loafers is the classic pairing. Because the trouser carries so much detail, the rest of the outfit should be quiet: muted colours, no competing pattern. Let the waist be the feature.
Do Gurkha trousers suit shorter men?
Yes. The high rise and clean, buckled waist lengthen the leg, which flatters shorter frames. Keep the top tucked and the leg straight rather than wide, and the trouser will add height rather than bulk. Avoid a very wide or cropped cut, which shortens the line.
Why do Gurkha trousers not need a belt?
Because the waistband closes itself. Two buckled straps cross the front and cinch the waist, doing the job a belt would. This keeps the waistline clean and uninterrupted, which is a large part of why the trouser looks considered. It is also why you should never add a belt to a Gurkha.
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