Most guys don't set out to buy no logo t-shirts for men. They just get tired of walking around as a billboard for some brand's name in six-inch letters across their chest. Once you notice it, every tee in your drawer suddenly looks loud, and finding something clean feels harder than it should be, since half the "basics" section at big retailers still slaps a logo somewhere.
This list solves that problem directly. We rounded up ten brands actually built around plain, unmarked tees, not just ones that happen to have a blank option buried in their catalog. Every pick here gets judged on fabric weight, cotton quality, fit, and how the shirt holds up after real washing, not just how it looks in a product photo.
We've tested and researched these options with an eye toward what makes a tee last, since a logo-free shirt only works if the construction backs it up. You'll find heavyweight cotton picks, slim and relaxed fits, and a few options built for layering. Our own SÖMNAD tee, cut from 300g Supima cotton, is one of them, and we'll tell you exactly where it fits alongside the rest.
1. Sömnad Relaxed Tee
Sömnad built its whole catalog around a single idea: strip away everything that doesn't earn its place on the shirt. No chest logo, no back print, no woven tag flapping at the collar. Just a clean tee that leans on fabric quality and construction to do the talking, which is exactly what this list is looking for.

Fabric and construction
The Relaxed Tee starts with 300g Supima cotton, a heavier weight than almost anything else on this list. Most "premium" tees run between 180g and 220g, so this shirt has real substance in hand, and it doesn't go sheer after a few washes like thinner cotton does. Supima fiber is longer and stronger than standard upland cotton, which means less pilling and a surface that stays smooth instead of fuzzy. The seams are double-stitched at the shoulder and hem, and the collar is ribbed rather than bound, so it holds its shape wash after wash instead of stretching out by month three.
A shirt this heavy only stays wearable if the construction matches, and this one does.
Fit and available sizes
The cut is relaxed without being boxy. It skips the tight, cropped-sleeve look that a lot of "basics" brands lean into right now, and instead drapes a bit at the body while staying tailored through the shoulders. That makes it easy to wear alone or as a layering piece under a shirt jacket without feeling bulky.
| Size | Chest Width | Body Length |
|---|---|---|
| S | 20" | 27" |
| M | 21" | 28" |
| L | 22" | 29" |
| XL | 23" | 30" |
| XXL | 24" | 31" |
Price
A single Relaxed Tee runs in the $48 to $58 range depending on color, which sits above fast-fashion basics but below designer minimalist labels charging $90 and up for similar weight cotton. Multi-packs bring the per-shirt cost down further, which matters if you're trying to replace an entire drawer of logoed tees at once.
Best for
This tee suits guys who wear a plain shirt on its own most days and want it to still look intentional, not just like an undershirt that made it to the outside world. If you're someone who's already decided minimalist clothing is the direction you want your wardrobe headed, and you want one shirt that can anchor that shift, this is the one to start with.
2. Buck Mason Tee
Buck Mason built its reputation on heavyweight cotton basics long before "elevated essentials" became a marketing phrase. The brand's Curved Hem Tee is the closest thing to a house classic, and it shows up on plenty of no-logo lists because the brand keeps branding off the actual garment, saving it for the neck tag only.
Fabric and construction
This tee uses a heavyweight slub cotton, usually listed around 6.5 oz, which lands lighter than SÖMNAD's 300g Supima but still thicker than a typical retail basic. The slub texture gives the fabric a slightly uneven, worn-in look right out of the package, which some guys like and others find less clean than a smooth-knit tee. Construction includes reinforced shoulder seams and a ribbed collar that resists stretching, though the collar sits a touch looser than SÖMNAD's after repeated washing.
A slub-cotton tee reads more casual than smooth cotton, so it fits a relaxed wardrobe better than a sharp one.
Fit and available sizes
Buck Mason cuts this shirt with a slightly curved hem and a fitted body, running from XS through XXL. The sleeves sit close to the arm rather than boxy, so guys with a broader build often size up for comfort through the chest.
Price
A single tee runs $38 to $42, which undercuts SÖMNAD by about ten dollars but also uses a lighter fabric weight.
Best for
Buck Mason suits guys who want a casual, slightly textured tee for everyday wear and don't need the heaviest cotton available. It works well as a warm-weather staple, though it won't hold up quite as long under heavy rotation as a true heavyweight shirt.
3. BYLT Basics Tee
BYLT built its name on athletic-fit basics, and the Drop-Cut Tee is the shirt most guys mean when they mention the brand. It's marketed heavily toward gym-goers and guys who want a tee that shows some shape, and the branding stays off the front, tucked onto a small tag instead.

Fabric and construction
The Drop-Cut Tee uses a cotton-modal blend, usually around 180g, which runs noticeably lighter than SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton. Modal adds stretch and a softer hand feel, so the shirt moves well during workouts, but that same stretch means it doesn't hold structure the way heavier, all-cotton tees do. Seams are single-stitched rather than reinforced, which keeps the shirt lightweight but shows more wear after repeated washing than a heavier construction would.
A stretch-blend tee moves better than it lasts, so treat it as a rotation piece, not a forever shirt.
Fit and available sizes
BYLT cuts this shirt with a dropped hem and a fitted, athletic silhouette through the chest and arms. Sizing runs from S through 3XL, and the brand recommends sizing up if you want a looser drape, since the standard fit sits close to the body.
Price
A single tee runs $34 to $38, putting it among the cheaper options on this list, though multi-packs bring the per-shirt price down further if you're stocking up.
Best for
BYLT suits guys who want a fitted, gym-ready tee that still reads as plain and unmarked outside the gym. It's a solid pick if your priority is stretch and mobility over fabric weight, though guys chasing a longer-lasting, structured basic will find heavier options like SÖMNAD or Buck Mason hold their shape better over time.
4. Cuts Clothing Curved Hem Tee
Cuts Clothing markets itself almost entirely on fit, pitching its tees as the shirt that makes you look broader through the shoulders and leaner at the waist. There's no logo on the shirt itself, just a small tag at the hem, and the brand leans on tailoring rather than fabric weight to stand out from other plain tees.
Fabric and construction
The Curved Hem Tee uses a cotton-polyester-elastane blend, typically around 190g, which is lighter and stretchier than SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton. The elastane content gives the shirt noticeable give across the chest and shoulders, which helps it hug the body without restricting movement. Construction includes a reinforced curved hem and a slightly higher collar, though the synthetic blend means the fabric runs warmer in humid weather than an all-cotton tee.
A stretch blend can shape the body better than plain cotton, but it trades away some of the breathability that heavier natural fibers give you.
Fit and available sizes
Cuts cuts this shirt with a fitted silhouette through the torso and a curved hem that sits slightly longer in the back. Sizing runs from S through 3XL, and the brand's sizing charts run tighter than most, so guys between sizes often size up for a more comfortable drape through the chest.
Price
A single tee runs $40 to $44, landing close to Buck Mason's price point but with a noticeably different fabric composition and stretch profile.
Best for
Cuts suits guys who care most about body-shaping fit and don't mind a synthetic blend over pure cotton. It works well for guys who want their tee to visibly define their shoulders and waist, though anyone chasing breathability or long-term durability will find heavier cotton picks like SÖMNAD age better.
5. Fresh Clean Threads Tee
Fresh Clean Threads started as a sock brand and expanded into tees with the same pitch: simple, unbranded basics at a price that lets you buy more than one at a time. The shirts skip any front graphic entirely, and the only branding lives on a small interior tag, keeping the focus on the plain design most guys on this list are actually shopping for.
Fabric and construction
This tee uses a cotton-polyester blend, usually a 60/40 split around 180g, which runs lighter and less structured than SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton. The polyester content helps the shirt resist wrinkling and dry faster after a wash, which suits guys who travel or don't want to iron a basic tee. Construction is straightforward, with a standard crew collar and single-stitched hems, so it doesn't hold shape as long as a heavier all-cotton build under repeated wear.
A cotton-poly blend trades some fabric weight for easy care, which matters more if you're washing a shirt every other day.
Fit and available sizes
Fresh Clean Threads cuts this shirt with a true-to-size, slightly athletic fit that sits close through the chest without feeling restrictive. Sizing runs from S through 3XL, and the brand's fit guide tends to run accurate, so most guys can order their normal size without adjusting up or down.
Price
A single tee runs around $28 to $32, and the brand leans hard into multi-packs, often dropping the per-shirt price closer to $20 when you buy in bulk.
Best for
Fresh Clean Threads suits guys who want to replace an entire drawer of logoed tees without spending heavyweight-cotton prices on every shirt. It's a smart budget pick for daily rotation, though anyone wanting a tee with more substance and a longer lifespan should look toward heavier options like SÖMNAD or Buck Mason instead.
6. True Classic Tee
True Classic built its entire marketing engine around one message: a fitted, wrinkle-resistant tee that looks tailored without a tailor. The brand ran heavy social ads for years pitching the shirt as a budget alternative to designer basics, and it stuck, mostly because the shirt itself skips any front logo and keeps branding to a small neck tag.
Fabric and construction
The tee uses a cotton-polyester-elastane blend, usually listed around 180g, which sits well below SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton in raw weight. That lighter blend is why the shirt resists wrinkles out of the dryer and holds a crisp look without ironing, but it also means less substance in hand and a warmer feel in humid weather compared to an all-cotton tee. Construction includes a reinforced collar and side seams, though the synthetic content shows pilling faster than heavier natural-fiber shirts after repeated washing.
A wrinkle-resistant blend saves you ironing time, but it rarely matches the lifespan of heavier all-cotton construction.
Fit and available sizes
True Classic cuts this shirt with a fitted, tapered silhouette through the chest and waist, and sizing runs from S through 4XL with a dedicated "Big & Tall" range. The fit runs tighter than most tees on this list, so guys who prefer a relaxed drape typically size up.
Price
A single tee runs $25 to $30, and the brand pushes bundles hard, often bringing the per-shirt cost down near $18 when you buy a six-pack.
Best for
True Classic suits guys who want a fitted, low-maintenance basic at a budget price and don't mind trading fabric weight for wrinkle resistance. It's a reasonable pick for travel or frequent wear, though anyone chasing the heft and longevity of a heavyweight cotton tee should look toward SÖMNAD or Buck Mason instead.
7. AS Colour Staple Tee
AS Colour started as a wholesale supplier for print shops, which is exactly why its Staple Tee shows up on so many no-logo lists. The brand never designed this shirt to carry a graphic front and center, so the blank canvas is the whole point, and that same plain build works just as well for guys who want a tee with nothing printed on it at all.
Fabric and construction
The Staple Tee runs on 150g combed cotton, noticeably lighter than SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton and on the thinner end of this entire list. Combed cotton removes short fibers during processing, so the surface feels smoother than basic ringspun cotton, but the lighter weight means the fabric shows more movement and less structure once it's off the hanger. Construction is simple: a side-seamed body, a standard crew collar, and single-needle stitching at the hem, which keeps costs down but won't hold up to years of heavy rotation the way a heavier, reinforced build does.
A shirt built for printing prioritizes a smooth, flat surface over the thickness that makes a tee last for years.
Fit and available sizes
AS Colour cuts this shirt with a classic, true-to-size fit that skips the tapered or athletic shaping you'll find on brands like BYLT or Cuts. Sizing runs from XS through 5XL, one of the widest ranges on this list, which makes it a common pick for guys who struggle to find basics outside standard S-M-L-XL.
Price
A single tee runs $18 to $22, making it one of the cheapest options here, and bulk pricing drops it even lower for anyone buying in volume.
Best for
AS Colour suits guys who want a plain, no-frills tee at the lowest price point on this list, or anyone who needs sizing outside the usual range. It's not built for longevity, so guys wanting a shirt that holds shape for years should look toward SÖMNAD's heavier Supima cotton instead.
8. Everlane Organic Cotton Crew
Everlane built its brand around radical transparency, publishing the actual cost breakdown of what goes into each shirt, from fabric to labor to markup. The Organic Cotton Crew fits that story well: no front logo, no back print, just a small tag inside the collar and a factory name Everlane will actually tell you if you ask.
Fabric and construction
This tee uses 100% organic cotton, usually around 150g, which puts it in the same lightweight range as AS Colour rather than anywhere near SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton. Organic cotton skips synthetic pesticides during growing, which matters if that's a priority for you, but it doesn't change the fabric's weight or durability on its own. Construction stays simple, with a ribbed crew collar and standard side seams, and the shirt softens noticeably after a few washes, which some guys like and others read as the fabric thinning out early.
Organic cotton speaks to how the fiber was grown, not how thick or long-lasting the finished shirt turns out to be.
Fit and available sizes
Everlane cuts this shirt with a true-to-size, slightly relaxed fit that skips both the athletic taper of BYLT and the boxier drape of SÖMNAD. Sizing runs from XS through XXL, and the brand's size chart tends to run accurate, so most guys can order their usual size with confidence.
Price
A single tee runs $28 to $30, which sits in the same range as Fresh Clean Threads and well below SÖMNAD's heavier Supima cotton.
Best for
Everlane suits guys who care about sourcing transparency and want a lighter everyday tee without a printed logo. It's a solid pick for warm-weather wear, though anyone chasing the substance and shape retention of a heavyweight cotton tee should look toward SÖMNAD instead.
9. Uniqlo U Crew Neck Tee
Uniqlo's U line comes from its collaboration with designer Christophe Lemaire, and the Crew Neck Tee is the closest thing to a designer minimalist basic at mass-market pricing. There's no logo anywhere on the shirt, not even a printed neck label in most versions, which makes it a favorite among guys who want their tee to look like it came from a much pricier rack.

Fabric and construction
This tee runs on cotton jersey around 160g, well below SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton and closer in weight to Everlane or AS Colour. The jersey knit feels soft right away, but that softness comes from a looser weave that stretches out faster than a heavier, tighter-knit fabric. Construction is minimal: a self-fabric neckband instead of a ribbed collar, and single-stitched hems throughout. That neckband detail gives the shirt a cleaner, tag-free look up top, though it also means less reinforcement against stretching compared to SÖMNAD's ribbed collar.
A self-fabric collar looks cleaner on the hanger, but it won't hold its shape as long as a ribbed one does.
Fit and available sizes
Uniqlo cuts this shirt with a relaxed, slightly boxy fit that echoes the drape SÖMNAD goes for, though the U tee runs shorter in body length. Sizing spans XS through XXL, and Uniqlo's Japanese-influenced sizing tends to run slightly smaller than American brands, so guys between sizes often size up.
Price
A single tee runs $14.90 to $19.90, making it the cheapest option on this entire list by a wide margin, even before any seasonal markdown.
Best for
Uniqlo suits guys who want a clean, logo-free silhouette without spending much and don't mind replacing the shirt more often. It's a smart low-cost layering piece, though anyone wanting a tee that holds its shape for years should look toward SÖMNAD's heavier Supima build instead.
10. Into the AM Basic Tee
Into the AM started as a streetwear brand before pivoting toward plain, unbranded basics, and the shift shows in how the tee is built. There's no front graphic, no back print, just a small woven tag at the hem, which puts it squarely in the same no-logo category as everything else on this list, even though the brand's roots are in graphic tees.
Fabric and construction
This tee runs on a cotton-modal blend, usually around 190g, which lands closer to BYLT's weight than SÖMNAD's 300g Supima cotton. Modal gives the fabric a soft, almost silky hand feel and a bit of natural stretch, but that same softness means the shirt doesn't hold structure as firmly as a heavier all-cotton build. Construction includes a ribbed crew collar and standard side seams, and the shirt resists shrinking better than pure cotton tees, though it still shows more wear at the seams after a year of steady rotation than a reinforced heavyweight shirt would.
Modal blends feel great against the skin, but softness this early usually means less structure a year down the line.
Fit and available sizes
Into the AM cuts this shirt with a slightly fitted, athletic-leaning silhouette that sits close through the chest without the dropped hem BYLT uses. Sizing runs from S through 3XL, and the brand's fit guide runs fairly accurate, so most guys order their usual size without needing to adjust.
Price
A single tee runs $22 to $26, and the brand frequently bundles three-packs that bring the per-shirt price down closer to $18, similar to Fresh Clean Threads' bulk pricing.
Best for
Into the AM suits guys who want a soft, budget-friendly basic with a bit of stretch and don't need heavyweight cotton for their everyday rotation. It works well as an affordable layering piece, though anyone chasing the durability and structure of a heavier tee should look toward SÖMNAD or Buck Mason instead.

Choosing the right logo-free tee for you
Every tee on this list skips the front logo, but they don't skip the same corners. Fabric weight is the real dividing line: lighter blends from Uniqlo, AS Colour, and Everlane cost less and breathe easier, while heavyweight cotton from SÖMNAD or Buck Mason costs more upfront but holds its shape through years of washing instead of months. If you're buying one shirt to wear on repeat, weight matters more than price.
Decide what you're actually optimizing for before you check out. Want the cheapest way to clear logos out of your drawer? Fresh Clean Threads or True Classic bundles get you there fast. Want a shirt that still looks sharp after fifty washes and never needed a logo to look expensive? That's what 300g Supima cotton is built for.
If durability and clean construction matter more to you than a discount rack, shop the Relaxed Tee at SÖMNAD and see what "less, but better" actually feels like.

