Bahia Miami Swim Week is positioning Latin American resortwear exactly where it belongs: in the center of the Miami conversation. Scheduled for Friday, May 29, from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. at JW Marriott Marquis Miami, the showcase brings together emerging and established designers for an evening focused on swimwear, resort dressing, accessories, and the kind of coastal glamour Miami understands instinctively.
The event, produced with support from JI Public Relations, is framed as an international swimwear and resortwear showcase overlooking the Brickell skyline. That setting matters. Downtown Miami gives the presentation a more polished city edge, moving the mood beyond beach-only styling and into the wider world of vacation wardrobes, cocktail dressing, and destination fashion.
A Latin American Resortwear Edit
Bahia Miami is sharing event updates on Instagram, and public event details are listed on the Bahia event page.
The Bahia lineup includes La Roja by Misha, Tina Beachwear, Marieto EC, Bartolome Hats, Beth Swimwear, Bululu, and King. Together, the group points to a wider Latin American fashion story: bold femininity, artisanal influence, strong accessories, and a resortwear category that is becoming more sophisticated season by season.
La Roja by Misha is noted in the agenda as the first resortwear brand from Guatemala to officially present during Miami Swim Week, a detail that gives the showcase a meaningful regional milestone. The brand’s presentation is expected to bring a contemporary view of Latin American fashion through elevated silhouettes and artisanal references.
Tina Beachwear, presented by Argentinian designer and model Agustina Bruenner, will introduce its Golden Tide collection. The brand’s language is sensual and polished, leaning into coastal glamour without losing the ease that modern swimwear needs. Bartolome by Marieto EC adds an Ecuadorian luxury resortwear note, while Bartolome Hats brings statement accessories shaped by heritage techniques and modern styling.
Why Bahia Fits the Moment
Miami Swim Week is no longer only about swimwear as a product category. It is about how brands build a complete summer identity: the hat, the cover-up, the evening look, the social image, the vacation mood. Bahia’s strength is that it brings those pieces together through a Latin American lens.
That matters commercially as much as creatively. Resortwear has become one of fashion’s most flexible categories, especially for consumers who want pieces that travel from poolside to dinner without feeling overdesigned. Designers who can balance craft, fit, color, and lifestyle are the ones most likely to stand out.
Accessories Will Matter
One of the more interesting parts of the Bahia edit is the presence of hats and accessories alongside swimwear. Resortwear works best when it feels complete, and Miami audiences tend to respond to full styling rather than isolated pieces. A statement hat, a polished cover-up, or a sharply styled sandal can change a swim look from product presentation into a full vacation image.
That is also where Latin American designers can bring a strong advantage. Many of the region’s best resort stories are rooted in color, handwork, sensuality, and climate-aware design. In a Miami setting, those references do not need much explanation. They already belong to the city’s rhythm.
A Showcase With Buyer Potential
The timing is smart as well. A Friday evening presentation gives Bahia room to operate as both runway event and industry gathering, with enough space for media, creators, and retail-minded guests to actually absorb the brands. For labels trying to grow beyond their home markets, that kind of room can be more valuable than a fast, crowded runway moment.
For the wider week, see 24Fashion’s Miami Swim Week 2026 guide. The season also includes designer-led moments such as Lila Nikole’s Platinum FUBU collaboration.
For more details, Bahia Miami is sharing updates through Instagram, with public event information available through the Bahia event page.
