Every season, swimwear has its own protagonists: a color that dominates, a cut that takes over, and one or two details that appear across every collection. In 2026, those protagonists are three — and none of them go unnoticed: polka dots in black and white, the high-waisted bandeau, and gold hardware integrated directly into the design.
None of the three is new — polka dots and the bandeau have been reappearing in beach wardrobes for decades — but in 2026 they coincide in the same moment with a shared logic: communicating personality without needing excess. These are styles that look great on the sand, photograph effortlessly, and can transition from the water to the beach bar without losing coherence.
Red is still a protagonist this summer — in fact, it's one of the most repeated colors across seasonal collections. But in 2026, swimwear doesn't stop at color: silhouettes, prints, and finishes carry just as much weight as the palette. The result is a season with more variables to play with and more ways to build a look that works.
Polka dots: the print that never leaves because it always works
Polka dots have something very few prints can claim: they look classic and fresh at the same time. They don't have an expiration year. They don't belong to a single decade. And at the beach — where swimwear has to coexist with water, sand, and sunlight for hours — that timelessness is exactly what you want.
In 2026, polka dots dominate in two main versions: the classic black on white, the cleanest and most universal, and red on white or white on black, which adds energy without losing elegance. Seasonal swimwear collections work them into both swimwear pieces and beach clothing: wide-leg trousers, fluid skirts, and cover-ups that pair directly with a bikini or one-piece.

One of the most effective combinations of the season is precisely this: a bikini in a vivid solid color — red, terracotta, blue — over white-and-black polka dot trousers or a skirt. The print organizes the look while the bikini color activates it. It's a formula that works for almost every style and body type.
How to style it: polka dots already have enough presence on their own, so accessories should stay simple. White or black sandals, a neutral raffia bag, no statement earrings. The cleaner everything else is around the print, the greater its impact.
The bandeau: the cut that defines the season
The bandeau has been building momentum for several seasons, and in 2026 it reaches its peak moment. The reason isn't just aesthetic — it's also practical. The bandeau eliminates strap tan lines, has a clean silhouette that pairs with almost anything, and in its high-waisted versions creates one of the most flattering proportions in swimwear.
The version most seen in 2026 is the structured bandeau with a central metal detail — a ring, a clasp, a connector — combined with a high-waisted bottom. The combination defines the waist, elongates the leg, and looks just as good at the beach as on the coastal promenade.

Its biggest bonus: the bandeau works as a top outside of the water. Over a linen palazzo pant or under an open shirt, it becomes a complete outfit piece that holds its own against any ready-to-wear garment.
How to style it: if you already know how to pair a bandeau bikini with your figure, you've won half the equation. The other half comes down to accessories: with a red or monochromatic bandeau, always gold. With a polka dot or printed bandeau, keep it neutral.
Gold details: the accessory that comes built in
The biggest construction trend in 2026 swimwear isn't a cut or a print — it's a metal. Gold hardware — rings, clasps, connectors, links — integrated directly into the garment design is the detail that separates a conventional bikini from a piece that looks like jewelry.

The difference from the gold hardware of previous seasons lies in the shape: in 2026, the forms are organic and irregular, as if cast by hand. These aren't the classic perfect rings of years past — they're sculptural connectors that add character without adding visual weight to the design.
They appear at the center of the bandeau, on the sides of the high-waisted bottom, at the closure of a one-piece, or as a detail on a halter strap. In every case, they do the same thing: elevate the piece without needing any external accessory.
How to style them: when a piece already has gold details built in, external accessories should be minimal. A wide gold cuff and small earrings is the maximum. The gold in the garment and the gold in the accessories should read as part of the same intention — not as competing layers.
Polka dots + bandeau + gold: how they work together
What's interesting about these three trends is that they don't compete — they complement. The bandeau is the cut, the gold is the construction detail, and the polka dots are the print. Each occupies a different layer of the design.
The most complete look of the season brings all three together without overloading: a solid-colored bandeau bikini with a gold center detail, paired with wide-leg black-and-white polka dot trousers. The solid color of the bandeau activates the contrast with the printed trousers, and the gold connects both pieces without needing any additional accessory.
It's the kind of look that appears considered without having required much effort — which is exactly what swimwear in 2026 asks for.
Beyond the bikini: when these details reach beach clothing
All three styles extend well beyond swimwear into beach clothing. Polka dots appear on wide-leg trousers, skirts, and cover-ups. Gold details show up on chain belts, raffia bag clasps, and sandal buckles. And the bandeau, as we've seen, works perfectly as an outer top.
This means that investing in a bandeau bikini with gold hardware or a quality polka dot trouser isn't investing in a single piece — it's building a system of items that work together and with the rest of your beach wardrobe.
If you also want to explore other silhouettes that benefit from these same details, the halter dress pairs beautifully with built-in gold details and a polka dot palette: a black halter combined with polka dot trousers is one of the most complete looks of the season.
Three trends, one shared logic
Polka dots, the bandeau, and gold hardware have more in common than just the moment: they share the same philosophy. All three communicate personality through detail, not volume. All three look good without needing everything else to compete with them. And all three age well because they're styles that don't expire with the season.
In a year where swimwear continues to evolve toward more considered, versatile, and longer-lasting pieces, these three trends represent exactly that shift. They're not passing fads. They're style criteria.