Miami Swim Week 2026 is not moving quietly. From May 24 through May 31, the city shifts into its annual swimwear-and-resortwear rhythm, with runway shows, brand activations, media events, and after-dark networking moving between South Beach, Downtown Miami, and the hotel spaces that have become part of the week’s fashion vocabulary.
This year’s agenda, shared by JI Public Relations, reads less like a single show week and more like a layered market moment: established names, Latin American designers, Italian beachwear brands, influencer-facing activations, and a few intimate presentations built for content and close-up detail. The result is a schedule that feels commercial, social, and highly Miami at the same time.
The Shows Return to Mondrian South Beach
Official updates are being shared through Miami Swim Week The Shows, with event and brand details also available from JI Public Relations.
The Mondrian South Beach venue is also listed by Mondrian South Beach, placing the main schedule inside one of Miami Beach’s most recognizable hotel settings.
At the center of the week is Miami Swim Week The Shows, running May 27 through May 31 at Mondrian South Beach. The official runway schedule includes names such as Ema Savahl, Amarotto Swimwear, Oisri Swim, Beachside Bikinis, Atelier Martinez, Jackie Vera Swimsuit, Lila Nikole, HeraSea, Smart Swimsuits, Italian Riviera by Italian Trade Agency, and more.
For editors and buyers, the schedule is useful because it shows how broad the category has become. Swimwear is still the anchor, but the strongest programming now sits somewhere between vacation dressing, resortwear, bodywear, accessories, and lifestyle branding. A bikini is rarely just a bikini anymore. It is part of a larger travel fantasy.
Latin America and Italy Take Bigger Space
Two international threads stand out. On May 29, Bahia Miami Swim Week brings Latin American swimwear and resortwear to JW Marriott Marquis Miami, with featured presentations connected to La Roja by Misha, Tina Beachwear, Marieto EC, Bartolome Hats, Beth Swimwear, Bululu, and King. The event leans into craftsmanship, coastal glamour, and the region’s increasingly visible place in the resort market.
On May 31, the Italian Trade Agency presents Italian Riviera at Mondrian South Beach, an official collective showcase built around Made in Italy beachwear and accessories. The lineup includes brands across swimwear, womenswear, menswear, resortwear, eyewear, bags, and accessories, giving the Italian pavilion a strong commercial point of view inside the week.
What to Watch
The best Miami Swim Week stories are often the ones that connect runway styling with real lifestyle signals: what women actually want to pack, what buyers can imagine selling, and which brands understand the space between beachwear and eveningwear. In 2026, that space looks especially active.
There is also a clear designer-led current this season. HeraSea will present both a pre-collection boat experience and a runway show, while Jackie Vera’s May 29 runway slot adds another focused swimwear moment to the official schedule. Lila Nikole, whose Miami Swim Week presentation with Platinum FUBU has already generated attention, also appears on the May 30 schedule. Read more about that collaboration on 24Fashion.
The Calendar Is Built for Discovery
What makes the 2026 calendar useful is the mix of scales. Some moments are designed for a classic runway audience, while others are clearly built for brand storytelling, social content, and buyer conversations. That combination reflects where swimwear sits now: part fashion show, part hospitality platform, part direct-to-consumer image machine.
The week also gives newer labels a practical advantage. A tightly scheduled runway slot can place an emerging swim or resortwear brand next to names with more established followings, letting editors compare fit, fabrication, styling, and audience reaction in real time. For a category driven by visual identity, that proximity matters.
For more Miami fashion context, read 24Fashion’s coverage of Lila Nikole and Platinum FUBU at Miami Swim Week and our recent look at how Cannes 2026 is reshaping red-carpet rules.
Miami Swim Week has always been part runway, part business, part scene. The 2026 calendar suggests all three are still very much in play.
