Men's Wedding Shoes: How to Choose Them for the Groom, Best Man and Guests

Men's Wedding Shoes: How to Choose Them for the Groom, Best Man and Guests

Shoes for a wedding — whether you're the groom, a best man or a guest — are the element of the outfit that most often gets underestimated and chosen at the last minute. Yet they're what others notice first, especially in photos. In this guide you'll find how to choose the right shoes for every role and every type of ceremony.


Groom's shoes: what to choose

The groom has the highest expectations across the board — and the shoe must live up to the suit. The main options:

Smooth black or dark-brown leather oxford

The most formal and most classic choice. The oxford (with closed lacing) is the ceremony shoe par excellence — it exceeds the derby and any type of loafer in formality. With a black or dark navy suit, a smooth black leather oxford is flawless. With a charcoal-grey suit, an oxford in dark brown is more modern and equally elegant.

Cap-toe derby in smooth leather

Slightly less formal than the oxford, but perfectly adequate for any wedding that isn't a state ceremony. The smooth black or dark-brown leather cap-toe derby is the most versatile choice: formal enough, but wearable again after the wedding in office settings.

Smooth-leather loafer (for more informal weddings)

For smart-casual, outdoor, summer weddings or with unstructured suits — a smooth black or dark-brown leather loafer can work. Not for traditional or very formal ceremonies.

What to avoid

  • New shoes on the wedding day without breaking them in first — the first hours in new leather shoes are always the hardest
  • Suede for formal weddings — too casual for the register of the ceremony
  • Shoes with excessive decoration (studs, ornamental buckles) — they take attention away from the whole
  • Shoes you've never worn before — break them in at least 2-3 times before the big day

The right colour based on the groom's suit

Suit Recommended shoe Alternative
Black / midnight blue Black oxford/derby Dark brown
Charcoal grey Black or dark-brown oxford Dark brown
Mid / pearl grey Dark-brown or cognac derby Black oxford
Navy blue Dark-brown derby Cognac
Beige / sand (summer) Cognac or tan derby Tan loafer
White / cream Cognac or dark-brown derby Black oxford (very formal)

Shoes for the best man

The best man should be elegant but not overshadow the groom. The practical rule: the same level of formality as the groom, a coordinated but not identical colour. If the groom wears a black oxford, the best man can wear a dark-brown derby. If the groom wears a cognac derby, the best man can wear dark brown or black.

Avoid coordinating too precisely (same model, same colour) — it looks like a uniform. Stylistic coherence is enough.


Shoes for wedding guests

The rule for guests is simple: don't outshine the groom. Don't wear shoes more formal or more eye-catching than the groom's. Don't wear sneakers (except at explicitly casual weddings with a stated dress code). Don't wear sandals in formal settings.

For formal ceremonies (church, villa, luxury hotel)

Smooth black, dark-brown or dark-brown leather derby or oxford. A smooth-leather college loafer for those who want something less rigid but still adequate.

For semi-formal ceremonies (farmhouse, garden, civil wedding)

A smooth-leather or suede derby or loafer. In summer: a tan or natural-tan suede loafer with a lightweight suit or linen ensemble. Freer colours — cognac, navy suede, dark brown.

For casual weddings or destination weddings

A suede loafer, a summer rope-sole loafer, a suede derby. The shoe must be clean and well kept — even in a casual context, a pair of unpolished or worn shoes isn't acceptable at a wedding.


The breaking-in question: the most important tip

Whatever shoes you choose for the wedding, wear them at least 3-4 times before the day. Leather shoes have an adaptation period — the heel and sides of the upper soften with use. Turning up to a wedding with brand-new, un-broken-in shoes means risking blisters and discomfort throughout the ceremony.

If the shoes pinch somewhere, take them to a cobbler before the wedding: they can permanently widen the pressure point locally.


How to prepare your shoes for the wedding

Preparation begins at least a week before:

  1. Clean the shoes with a horsehair brush to remove dust and residue
  2. Apply nourishing cream — it nourishes the leather and softens it for breaking in
  3. Polish with wax the day before — for a deep, lasting shine
  4. Insert shoe trees the night before to keep the shape perfect
  5. Bring a soft cloth on the day — for a quick touch-up if needed

Complete guide to leather shoe care →


Mille885 models for a ceremony

For a wedding or an important ceremony, the most suitable Mille885 models:

  • Boston derby in black leather: cap toe, calf leather, Blake construction. The most formal choice in the collection — suitable for the groom and for guests in formal settings
  • College loafer in smooth black or dark-brown leather: for semi-formal weddings or for those who prefer an elegant slip-on

Discover the Mille885 collection →


Frequently asked questions — men's wedding shoes

Oxford or derby for a wedding?

The oxford is more formal — the best choice for traditional or very elegant ceremonies. The derby is slightly less rigid but perfectly adequate for most weddings. For a groom in a classic ceremony suit: oxford. For a modern or unstructured suit: derby.

Can you wear suede to a wedding?

At formal ceremonies, no — suede lowers the register. At semi-formal, summer or informal weddings, yes — a dark-brown or cognac suede loafer or derby is acceptable and very elegant.

Which shoe colour with a grey suit at a wedding?

With charcoal grey: black or dark brown. With mid-grey: dark brown or cognac for a more modern look. With light/pearl grey: cognac or tan — the warm contrast works very well.

Can you wear brown shoes to a wedding?

Absolutely — brown (in all its variants: dark brown, cognac, tan) is a very elegant choice for a wedding, especially with non-black suits. The old "no brown in town" prejudice is outdated in modern menswear.


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