Gray Sweatpants Season, Explained - Vox
Maybe your like
- Explainers
- Politics
- Culture
- Advice
- ListenPodcast
- WatchVideo
- Login / Sign Up
- VideoWatch
- PodcastListen
- CrosswordPlay
- Explainers
- Politics
- Culture
- Advice
- Science
- Technology
- Climate
- Health
- Money
- Life
- Future Perfect
- Newsletters
- Archives
- Youtube
- RSS
- TikTok
We need your support in 2026
When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters. At Vox, our mission is to help you make sense of the world — and that work has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.
We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?
Join now- Money
Gray sweatpants season, explained.
by Rebecca JenningsMar 12, 2019, 4:40 PM UTC- Share
- Gift


Over the course of the past year or so, everyone got horny online.
To be fair, people have always been horny online; that’s sort of a big part of being online. Plus, it’s been a weird time. Things are bad, and maybe getting worse! So it only makes sense that in the past 12 months alone, an aquarium had to apologize for calling one of its otters “thicc,” and people decided they wanted to have sex with a certain duck and a Pixar animated character, and also wished for Rachel Weisz to top them.
At the Daily Dot, Ana Valens explored the phenomenon and how social media shaped it. “Twitter has developed a language around horniness that makes thirst less objectifying,” she wrote. “Suggestive photos are just ‘thirst traps.’ Obsessing over your gym crush’s cute bod is just ‘thirst posting.’ ... Putting online horniness into a coded language makes it feel like a shared experience, making it less taboo to express one’s sexuality on the internet.”
And there’s perhaps no better emblem in the world of coded online lasciviousness than gray sweatpants. Gray sweatpants, of course, are just sweatpants that are gray. But online, “gray sweatpants” are the equivalent of a simpering wink between the digital thirsty.
To be completely frank with you, fellow adult, here is the actual allure of gray sweatpants on the internet: It’s that you can sort of see the outline of a guy’s dick when he wears them. That’s it. Much like the cultural fervor about 10 years ago over how yoga pants (back when they were called “yoga pants” and not just leggings) made a woman’s butt look good, gray sweatpants have lasted as a thirst phenomenon because there are not a lot of ingredients one needs to achieve the look. As long as you’ve got a) gray sweatpants and b) a dick, you’re good.
They are also not exactly difficult to procure. It is the rare person who doesn’t own a pair of sweatpants — unlike a suit, which can cost hundreds of dollars, a pair of sweatpants can go for 15 bucks — and they might as well be gray. That they must be gray in order to be “gray sweatpants” likely has to do with the shadow effect: It’s more difficult to see the lumps and bumps on a person’s body when the person is wearing darker colors.
Just as there is sundress season, which Bossip deftly described as “the perfect time for women to smuggle their hams in flowy-yet-tight pieces of fabric sewn by the gods themselves,” there is also gray sweatpants season, which begins and ends around the same time that sweater season does.
But the greater “gray sweatpants season,” or rather, the time in which gray sweatpants have been an object of desire, is more nebulous. People have discussed them on Twitter and Tumblr for at least five years; podcaster Tracy Clayton’s 2015 BuzzFeed piece “Gray Sweatpants Are The Most Important Things A Man Can Wear” served as one of the earlier chronicles of the phenomenon.
And searches for “gray sweatpants season” spiked for the first time about six months later, at the start of that year’s actual sweatpants season.
The highest peak, however, was in the fall of 2016, when the “gray sweatpants challenge” went viral. Like most, the “challenge” here involved little more than taking a photo of oneself, and was quickly overrun with irony, where men took photos of themselves with brass instruments, televisions, and an actual Christmas tree.
But eyeballing men in gray sweatpants goes back much further than Twitter. Nichole Perkins, a writer and co-host of the podcast Thirst Aid Kit, says her earliest memories of the inside joke were among friends in high school and college, until an early online black community helped bridge the gap between those disparate friend groups.
Even before MySpace, there existed a social network where people lusted over gray sweatpants: BlackPlanet, which launched in 2001. Perkins remembers going on the site and finding that people would post pictures of themselves. “They would be very casual, just hanging out in gray sweatpants and girls were replying, ‘Do you see what I’m seeing?’ Other women would be like, ‘I see it,’” she says. “It picked up and became a way of laying out a thirst trap without being too obvious.”
For men, this is the true allure of posting a gray sweatpants photo: It’s the dude version of “no-makeup makeup.” You’re showcasing your hotness without looking like you’re trying to; in fact you’re trying so not-hard that you’re literally in pajamas. (Unlike simply putting on a pair of sweatpants, however, “no-makeup makeup” actually does require substantial effort — or requires your skin to be the kind that only exists after untold sums’ worth of treatment.)
“It’s the safest way of sending a dick pic without the social stigma of it,” Perkins explains. “Even if you don’t have a body like Chris Hemsworth, It’s a way for men who have different body types to still get the attention they want. They know what they’re doing, and they can get away with it. It’s a very casual flex.”
The low-key nature of the meme is also a benefit for the people who thirst for men in gray sweatpants. “I can say, ‘You look good in those pants,’ but that doesn’t mean I want to be with you in any way at all,” she says. “I think that’s something that’s particularly hard for straight men to understand, because sometimes you catch eyes with a guy just because you’re looking around the room and he thinks, ‘Oh, she looked at me. She must want me.’ No! What? How did we get there by just looking around?”
But the gray sweatpants phenomenon has required many men to figure out how to be objectified — without assuming that everyone doing the objectifying is actually planning to have sex with them. Women, of course, have for so long been objectified that to comment publicly on a woman’s appearance is practically expected. Talking about a guy looking good in his gray sweatpants, on the other hand, was once the stuff of private jokes and group chats. Now that it’s far more socially acceptable for women and gay men to perform our desire in public online spaces, it becomes a form of entertainment — an almost subversive one — that we finally get to enjoy together.
Gray sweatpants, as a thirst phenomenon, are almost endearing in their mundanity: While you could theoretically argue that they just show how low the bar is for men, gray sweatpants are also perfectly innocent as clothing items. It’s nobody’s fault that everyone can sort of see the outline of your genitals through them, and in fact, the sweatpants-ification of men’s pants (joggers are just fancy sweats!) proves that the look is a desirable one. Being attracted to dudes is hard enough, but when men wear gray sweatpants, everyone wins.
Want more stories from The Goods by Vox? Sign up for our newsletter here.
See More:- Culture
- Internet Culture
- Money
Most Popular
- One of Trump’s cruelest policies yet has received almost zero attention
- Why have Americans turned against this lifesaving medication?
- Take a mental break with the newest Vox crossword
- The most important line from Trump’s State of the Union
- The Air Quality Index and how to use it, explained
Today, Explained
Understand the world with a daily explainer, plus the most compelling stories of the day.
Email (required)Sign UpBy submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Advertiser Content FromThis is the title for the native ad
More in Money
PodcastMeet the toymaker who helped take down Trump’s tariffs
Why Wall Street panicked over a sci-fi blog post
The Republican justices are fighting over who should really run the government
We’re in an economic boom. Where are the jobs?
PodcastHow Americans learned to love the credit card
The Supreme Court just blew up Trump’s foreign policyPodcastsTwo hours ago
PodcastPodcastsTwo hours agoMeet the toymaker who helped take down Trump’s tariffsLearning Resources, an Illinois toy company, says it paid more than $10 million in tariffs.
By Kelli Wessinger and Noel KingPoliticsFeb 25
PoliticsFeb 25Why Wall Street panicked over a sci-fi blog postAn AI doom scenario so compelling, it shaved billions off the stock market.
By Eric LevitzPoliticsFeb 24
PoliticsFeb 24The Republican justices are fighting over who should really run the governmentThere are three camps: The judicial supremacists, the GOP partisans, and Amy Coney Barrett.
By Ian MillhiserThe HighlightFeb 24
The HighlightFeb 24We’re in an economic boom. Where are the jobs?AI is sending stocks soaring, rich people are spending big, and hiring is at a crawl. Here’s why.
By Heather LongExplain It to MeFeb 23
PodcastExplain It to MeFeb 23How Americans learned to love the credit cardA brief history of credit card debt.
By Jonquilyn HillPoliticsFeb 20
PoliticsFeb 20The Supreme Court just blew up Trump’s foreign policyHow will Trump get countries to do what he wants without tariffs?
By Joshua KeatingAdvertiser Content FromThis is the title for the native ad
Tag » What Do Gray Sweatpants Mean
-
Why Are Men Showing Us Their Penises In Grey Sweatpants?
-
Grey Sweatpants - Urban Dictionary
-
How Gray Sweatpants Became The Unofficial Symbol Of Fall Horniness
-
What's The Deal With Everyone Being All About Dudes Wearing ...
-
Gray Sweatpants Are A Men's Staple—and A Minefield | LEVEL
-
“If You Own A Pair Of Gray Sweatpants, Understand That You Might As ...
-
What Color Shirt Goes With Light Grey Sweatpants? - Quora
-
Do Girls Actually Like Guys In Grey Sweatpants? What Other Clothings ...
-
Gray Sweatpants Are The Most Important Things A Man Can Wear
-
27 Best Grey Sweatpants Season Ideas - Pinterest
-
Sweatpants - Wikipedia
-
Women Are Going Crazy Over Guys In Grey Sweatpants This ...
-
9 Best Gray Sweatpants For Guys