Women's Health

Gymshark Review: A Style Writer’s Honest Take on the Activewear Label

Plus, my honest review of the activewear label.

By Elliot O·Jun 12, 2026·2 min read
Gymshark Review: A Style Writer’s Honest Take on the Activewear Label

Reported by Women's Health Magazine.

If your fitness TikTok algorithm has any sense of direction, Gymshark has already crossed your screen. The UK-based activewear label has built a serious cult following by threading the needle between performance and style — and doing it at a price point that doesn't require a moment of silence for your bank account. According to Women's Health Magazine, a style writer who's been wearing the brand since her college days calls it genuinely worth the hype, which is a meaningful endorsement from someone whose job is testing workout clothes for a living.

The standout across the lineup is the Soft Sculpt Legging — a waistband-stays-put, doesn't-strangle-your-midsection situation that has remained in regular rotation through years of wear and plenty of competition. Paired with the Everyday Seamless Cropped Tank — structured enough to skip the sports bra for low-to-medium impact, sleek enough to style off the gym floor — it's a combination that covers everything from a lifting session to a Sunday errand run. For higher-intensity training, the Lift Seamless Sports Bra and matching shorts deliver support without restriction, while the Power Washed Cuffed Joggers earn their keep as the kind of effortless throw-on layer that actually looks intentional.

The Collab We're Already Adding to Cart

Gymshark's latest move? A 22-piece collaboration with Bratz that lands squarely in Y2K territory — sculpting fabrics, dipped waistbands, bum-scrunch seams, and a washed color palette in pinks and purples that reads more nostalgia done right than costume. The collection merges the doll brand's signature maximalist confidence with Gymshark's performance-forward construction, and the result is workout sets that are as flattering as they are functional. The Gymshark x Bratz Short, the Light Support Sports Bra with its dual-strap halter option, and a Full Zip Jacket are the early standouts worth bookmarking now.

Vintage activewear aesthetics have been everywhere lately, but a collab that actually backs the look with thoughtful construction is rarer than it should be — and this one appears to deliver on both counts.

If you've been sleeping on Gymshark because it reads as an algorithm brand rather than a serious contender, consider this your reason to reconsider — the quality holds up, the style translates beyond the gym, and the price point means you can actually build a full kit without the guilt spiral.


Read the original at Women's Health Magazine.

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Women's HealthWomen's Health MagazineHealth & Fitness

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