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Supreme Spring/Summer 2026 Drop Tracker: Dates, Prices, and Weekly Releases

Supreme's SS26 Week 4 drop is the season's most layered collab yet: MM6 Maison Margiela and Timberland in 18 pieces built around a $100 bill motif.

Claire Beaumont6 min read
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Supreme Spring/Summer 2026 Drop Tracker: Dates, Prices, and Weekly Releases
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The Season's Architecture: How Supreme SS26 Is Structured

Supreme's Spring/Summer 2026 season opened on February 26, kicking off a weekly Thursday drop format that has become the brand's signature operating rhythm. Each week goes live at 11 AM EST online and 8 AM PT in-store, and the cadence is relentless: Week 1 brought a Spider-Man x Vanson Leathers capsule alongside the Arabic Box Logo and a literal Titan Orion casket (yes, the kind you're buried in). Week 2 on March 5 centered a Nike collaboration, Week 5 on March 26 leaned into Ghostface Killah and a Dipset-coded American flag set, and Week 6 on April 2 features a DJ Screw tribute collection alongside what is, impossibly, a $9,000 ATM machine. For shoppers and resellers trying to plan around this season, the framework is simple: every Thursday is a new window, and the collaboration weeks are the ones worth building strategy around.

Week 4 (March 19): The MM6 Maison Margiela Drop

Week 4 is the season's centrepiece collab and the most commercially loaded drop of the first half of the SS26 run. Supreme and MM6 Maison Margiela, the diffusion line currently being steered by Glenn Martens, put out 18 pieces together, making it one of the larger Supreme collaboration collections in recent memory. The unifying visual concept is unmistakable: a $100 bill print applied across outerwear, footwear, and accessories in a way that reads less like novelty and more like a coherent Americana deconstruction. The collection also carries "Paris, New York, Milwaukee" branding across several pieces, a quietly absurdist geographic trio that is classic MM6 in its sensibility.

The outerwear anchors the whole collection. A hooded shearling bomber jacket appears in vintage mauve with an all-over $100 bill print and a removable hood; its green counterpart layers the currency motif over a richer base. A Schott leather jacket features a large bald eagle graphic across the back, accompanied by a black leather backpack and additional eagle-coded imagery throughout the lineup. A denim trucker jacket and matching distressed jeans round out the heavier pieces, with a stadium jacket, sweatpants, cotton football jersey, long-sleeve shirt, and short-sleeve tops filling in the mid-tier apparel. Accessories include a six-panel cap, silk scarf, and an unexpected boxing sub-capsule via Everlast: a heavy bag and a pair of 1910 Pro Boxing Gloves crafted in textured suede.

The Two Pieces Every Tracker Is Watching

MM6 Box Logo Zip Up Hooded Sweatshirt ($298)

This is the headline piece in both cultural and commercial terms. It is the first-ever zip-up box logo hoodie Supreme has produced, a distinction that carries real weight in a brand ecosystem where Box Logo pieces have been made in essentially one silhouette for decades. The brushed-back fleece construction features printed paint splatters throughout, a full zip closure, an embroidered MM6 numeric signature at the cuff, and an MM6 white stitch line at the back neck. It dropped in White, Navy, and Black. At $298 retail, it sits at a premium versus standard Supreme hoodies, but the first-ever-format status and the MM6 co-sign give it outsized collector appeal. On StockX, all three colorways are already listed and trading above retail.

Timberland 6" Premium Waterproof Boot ($328)

The second must-track piece is the three-way collaboration between Supreme, MM6 Maison Margiela, and Timberland. The classic 6-inch Premium Waterproof silhouette is reimagined with the same dollar bill motif from the shearling bomber and finished with shearling detailing. At $328, it is priced like a premium sneaker collab rather than a workhorse boot, but the visual concept is genuinely distinctive. The drop went live March 19 via Supreme online and in-store, with a secondary release via Maison Margiela's own channels. Asia received the drop two days later on March 21.

Sellout Predictions and Restock Reality

Of the 18 pieces in the Week 4 MM6 drop, five carry the highest sellout velocity and the most relevant resale upside:

  • The Box Logo Zip Up Hooded Sweatshirt in White (the most versatile colorway and the first to list heavily on secondary markets)
  • The Timberland 6" Boot (limited footwear collabs with three-brand involvement move quickly; the boot's visual punch and Maison Margiela distribution mean demand is spread across two retail ecosystems)
  • The Hooded Shearling Bomber Jacket (premium outerwear always outpaces apparel in sell-through speed at Supreme; the $100 bill print makes this a display piece, not just a jacket)
  • The Everlast 1910 Pro Boxing Gloves in hairy suede (low-production accessories within collab drops consistently sell out first; these are niche enough to avoid casual buyers but desirable enough to spike on resale)
  • The Silk Scarf (Supreme accessories at lower price points within a luxury collab sell disproportionately fast as entry-level pieces for buyers priced out of the outerwear)

On restocks: Supreme's history with MM6 is instructive. The previous SS24 Supreme x MM6 collaboration did not restock through Supreme's own channels after the initial drop. Maison Margiela's retail and online stores carried select pieces from the SS26 collab independently, which means monitoring both channels in the days following March 19 is the most realistic path to a restock opportunity. For the Timberland boot specifically, Timberland's own retail network is not part of the distribution agreement, so the two access points remain Supreme and MM6 Maison Margiela only.

Resale pricing on the Box Logo Zip Up Hooded Sweatshirt is tracking in the $450 to $600 range depending on colorway and size, representing roughly 1.5 to 2x retail. The Timberland boot is moving at a wider spread, with condition and size scarcity pushing certain sizes above $700 on secondary platforms.

Buy Smarter: A Cost-Per-Wear Framework for This Drop

The hype mathematics on MM6 pieces tend to favor patience over impulse. Before committing at retail or paying secondary market premiums, three questions sharpen the decision:

  • Cost-per-wear: The $100 bill motif on the shearling bomber and the Timberland boot is a statement, not a neutral. Both are conversation pieces with a limited rotation window; factoring in the number of realistic wears against a $328 or higher price point often reveals that a non-collab alternative delivers more value per use.
  • Wardrobe compatibility: The Box Logo Zip Up Hoodie in Navy or Black integrates into an existing wardrobe far more readily than the print-heavy outerwear. If the goal is wearability rather than investment, those colorways justify the $298 price more directly.
  • Return and resale exit: Supreme's standard return policy is extremely limited on collab pieces. If retail access is secured, StockX's Verified pricing and GOAT's authentication pipeline both offer liquid resale exits within days of the drop. Grailed remains the better platform for buyers negotiating below StockX's fee structure. Knowing the resale floor before purchase turns a potential loss into a break-even or better outcome.

The MM6 collab is not the season's most accessible drop, but it is its most considered one. For a brand that has leaned hard into novelty in recent seasons, the $100 bill motif as a sustained conceptual thread across 18 pieces is rare structural discipline. The pieces that carry that motif most legibly, the bomber, the Timberland boot, and the Box Logo Zip Up Hoodie, are the ones most likely to hold secondary value long after the season moves on.

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