The 6 Major Fall 2024 Shoe Trends, According to the Runways

From mules to moto boots, designers offered footwear for every possible mood.

a compilation of fall 2024 shoe trends from brands like Ferragamo, Gucci, Coach, Atluzzara, Chloe
(Image credit: Future)

The fall 2024 trends offer a healthy assortment of autumn's perennial favorites and novel twists on the classics. Along with an all-star cast of coveted designer handbags at New York Fashion Week and a breeding ground for new hat trends, the major shoe trends also encapsulated the season's everything-but-the-kitchen-sink variety.

Across the 2024 runways were reliable everyday shoes like darling mule-style heels, kitten heels, and some of the best boots you can ask for on an autumn stroll. Chemena Kamali's 53-look collection for Chloé (the German designer's first for the French fashion house and, in our humble opinion, one of Fall 2024's strongest) was a prime encapsulation of the season's overarching variety: in the highly anticipated runway show, shoe trends oscillated from sensible ballet flats to teetering pumps and buttery boots that hit at the high upper thigh (and higher). It was as if Kamali and her cohorts designed their footwear collections with every mood a woman could have in mind.

Marie Claire analyzed the runways and found six overachieving themes, both practical and playful, across the fall 2024 shoe trends. Ahead, you'll find the full fall 2024 shoe trend report, and for proactive shoppers, this is your chance to get a step ahead of the trends before the season even begins.

Boots Made for Stomping

stomping boots at Coach, Miu Miu, Loewe

Coach, Miu Miu, and Loewe showed a series of heavy-duty stomper-style boots on the fall 2024 runways in New York and Paris.

(Image credit: Coach, Miu Miu, Loewe)

Like flip-flops are central to summer weather, boots are synonymous with fall. This season, designers envisioned a shoe for a season full of stomping on autumn leaves and strolling around city sidewalks, offering many different types of boots with a grungey, lived-in look. Loewe and Coach sent out a series of hardware-forward moto boots, while Miu Miu marched out a series of strap and buckle-clad combat fall boots that give the seasoned vintage look of a pre-loved pair of shoes.

Levitating Loafers

Platform loafers at Burberry, Gucci, Victoria Beckham

Platform loafers at Burberry, Gucci, Victoria Beckham went sky high.

(Image credit: Burberry, Gucci, Victoria Beckham)

These aren't the basic penny loafers you wore fighting for your spot as the teacher's pet in prep school. Forget prim and proper—the best loafers for fall 2024 are stacked with lofty platform soles. At Gucci, the Italian heritage house elevated the flatform loafers from its Spring 2023 collection (which have already become the identifiable shoe of Sabato de Sarno's tenure) to higher heights with a slim rectangular heel. On Victoria Beckham's runway, loafers had lug soles and ribbed treads, while at Burberry in London, loafer soles were bulbous, while the heels remained chunky.

Upper-Thigh-Highs

Gucci, Chloé, Ferragamo over the knee boots

Super thigh-high boots seen on the fall 2024 runways of Gucci, Chloé, and Ferragamo.

(Image credit: Gucci, Chloé, Ferragamo)

This winter was all about the best knee-high boots, but for the fall 2024 shoe trends, boots went well over the knee and up into mid-to-upper thigh territory. On Chloé's catwalk, leather longline pairs were visible underneath sheer boho frocks, while Gucci teamed its full-coverage footwear with itty-bitty hot pants. If you're in need of a thigh-high boot outfit idea, look no further. This trend also lends itself to the no-pants look since your shoes practically double as your bottoms.

Free the Ankle!

Mules at Bottega Veneta, Dries Van Noten, Victoria Beckham

Mules were a popular runway shoe at Bottega Veneta, Dries Van Noten, Victoria Beckham.

(Image credit: Bottega Veneta, Dries Van Noten, Victoria Beckham)

The best mules were a surprising, underdog choice across New York, London, Milan, and Paris' fall runways because, like lightweight linens and barely-there tanks, ankles often get tucked away for the colder-weather seasons. But not for fall 2024. Bottega Veneta's Matthieu Blazy flexed his intrecciato muscles with tightly woven leather slip-ons, Dries Van Noten (ever the innovator) sent out sculptural backless mules, and appropriately Victoria Beckham's sharp stiletto mules were as posh as could be.

To the Point

Prada, Altuzarra, Chloé

Triangle-pointed heels teetered down the runways at Prada, Altuzarra, and Chloé.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Every season, you can expect impressive geometric feats of footwear: hair-thin stilettos, sculpted uppers, or cutout vamps. For fall 2024, designers pushed the design limit with conical-shaped heels. Altuzarra and Chloé showcased slingback heels and strappy mules that tapered neatly into a triangle shape, while Prada designed low-to-the-ground kitten heels with angular style pumps.

Fuzzy Feet

fuzzy shoes at Versace, Ferragamo, Jil Sander

Fuzzy, fur-tastic footwear took center stage at Versace, Ferragamo, and Jil Sander.

(Image credit: Versace, Ferragamo, Jil Sander)

ASMR-esque shoes (fashion editors, buyers, and other fashion week attendees could hear them swish from across the catwalk) made of fuzzy textiles gave quiet luxury a run for its money on fall's runways. Cozy, comfy, and unconventional, fuzzy footwear was on the more experimental end of the season's spectrum. Versace had faux fur slippers, Ferragamo debuted colorful feathered pumps, and Jil Sander's shaggy strappy sandals and goat hair flats were all part of the furry footwear agenda. We think any of these plushy pairs will coordinate quite nicely with fall 2024's best faux fur coat options.

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Emma Childs
Fashion Features Editor

Emma is the fashion features editor at Marie Claire, where she writes deep-dive trend reports, zeitgeisty fashion featurettes on what style tastemakers are wearing, long-form profiles on emerging designers and the names to know, and human interest vignette-style round-ups. Previously, she was Marie Claire's style editor, where she wrote shopping e-commerce guides and seasonal trend reports, assisted with the market for fashion photo shoots, and assigned and edited fashion celebrity news.

Emma also wrote for The Zoe Report, Editorialist, Elite Daily, Bustle, and Mission Magazine. She studied Fashion Studies and New Media at Fordham University Lincoln Center and launched her own magazine, Childs Play Magazine, in 2015 as a creative pastime. When she's not waxing poetic about niche fashion topics, you'll find her stalking eBay for designer vintage, reading literary fiction on her Kindle, and baking banana bread in her tiny NYC kitchen.