The 14 Best Mary Jane Shoes for Fall 2024

The shoe symbolizes high-power femininity.

Graphics of Mary Janes shoes of designer runway shoes and fashion week street style
(Image credit: Future)

The trajectory of the Mary Jane shoe trend has been fascinating to behold. Characterized by a strap (or many) spanning the instep, the silhouette can shapeshift and hopscotch across aesthetics. One season, the best Mary Janes on the market are like the girlish patent leather pairs you wore on the schoolyard. Fast forward a fashion cycle, and strappy platform Mary Janes with a distinctly disco attitude are seasonal best-sellers.

But as a fall 2024 shoe trend, there is no single front-running Mary Jane silhouette. Knee-high boots with studded front straps walked down Christian Dior’s Fall 2024 runways, and both ladylike kitten heels and buckle-front flats popped up at Miu Miu. In the celerity street style circuit, Jennifer Lawrence wears Alaïa’s $1,050 crisscross Mary Janes, and Katie Holmes loves ViBi Venezia’s $150 velvet flats (if you think they look like your old American Girl Doll’s slippers, you’re not wrong). Just a few weeks ago, Taylor Swift gave the shoe trend a French girl kick in a bulky, block-heeled Mary Janes by Parisian brand Sézane.

Katie Holmes walking in the street in blue Mary Jane shoes, baggy jeans, and a yellow sweater.

Katie Holmes in her blueberry-colored Mary Jane slippers.

(Image credit: Splash News)

For non-celebrities, the best Mary Jane flats are comfortable, pain-free everyday footwear. “My tolerance for aching feet has dwindled to almost zero, and I longed for a flat shoe that would tick the ‘I’ve made an effort’ box—Mary Janes do that for me,” says Angharad Jones, a United Kingdom-based freelance writer and fashion content creator. “That little strap across the top of the foot offers more support and practicality [than a ballet flat] and means the shoe won’t slip off at inopportune moments. They’re more sturdy, and, for me, that’s where Mary Janes’s endurance lies,” says the author of the style Substack The Jones Report.

Four images of fashion content creator Angharad Jones wearing black Mary Jane flats and green Mary Jane flats.

Fashion content creator Angharad Jones showing off her two favorite Mary Jane flats: one in black velvet, the other in olive green leather.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Angharad Jones)

Fashion TikTok concurs with Jones: the social media platform has christened Rothy’s best-selling $160 Mary Jane ballet flats a must-buy: “I can be on my feet for the next 12 hours [in Rothy’s Mary Janes] with a smile on my face,” one content creator raves in a video currently at six-point-three million views.

For one silhouette to consistently trend across multiple shoe categories—cushy everyday flats, platform heels, and doll-like slippers—is nothing short of remarkable. Los Angeles-based fashion stylist Shea Daspin credits the shoe’s success to its core attribute: the strap. “[Mary Janes] are an iconic silhouette that is as easy to reference as a ‘stiletto,’ [but] the difference is that the wearer isn’t limited to a heel shape or height, as the strap across the front of the shoe is what’s indicative of the style,” Daspin says over email. A ballet sneaker with pink ribbon straps is just as much a Mary Jane as a traditional buckle-front flat.

Three images of women wearing Mary Jane shoes; a woman in a printed set wearing yellow flat Mary Janes; a woman in a white dress wearing white mesh Mary Janes; and a woman in a black skirt and sheer top wearing heeled Mary Janes.

Three different iterations of the versatile Mary Jane: pointed-toe and printed flats, white mesh flats, and curved heels with a single instep strap.

(Image credit: Launchmetrics)

Plus, transformation is a core part of the shoe’s story: the moniker is believed to be drawn from a character named Mary Jane in the 1902 comic strip, 'Buster Brown,’ which was then pulled from the pages and into women’s footwear. "People are drawn to Mary Janes because they have been around for over a century, and we're used to seeing them repurposed in a different way each decade," says Daspin.

The current decade is a textbook example of the shoe's potential for evolution: Miu Miu’s 2016 take on Mary Janes meant baby pink ballet flats cinched with grommet-punched leather; in the fall 2022 season, Bottega Veneta sold buckle-belted platforms that doubled as surrealist art, and Khaite offered strappy silver pumps for a space-age schoolgirl; and now, for fall 2024, the best Mary Janes can be squishy commuter shoes, $1,000 designer flats, or party pumps that can hold it down on the dance floor.

Mary Janes on Miu Miu Spring 2016/Bottega Veneta Fall 2022/Miu Miu Fall 2024

The Mary Jane evolution, from Miu Miu Spring 2016, Bottega Veneta Fall 2022, and Miu Miu (again) Fall 2024.

(Image credit: Miu Miu/Bottega Veneta/Miu Miu)

The best part is that you, dear shopper, have the freedom to choose which of Mary Jane's many iterations you want to strap into.

Shop More Mary Janes for Fall 2024

When it comes to the products Marie Claire recommends, we take your faith in us seriously. Every product that we feature comes recommended by a MC writer or editor, or by an expert we've spoken to. Learn more about how we review products.

Emma Childs
Fashion Features Editor

Emma is the fashion features editor at Marie Claire, where she writes deep-dive trend reports, zeitgeisty fashion featurettes on what style tastemakers are wearing, long-form profiles on emerging designers and the names to know, and human interest vignette-style round-ups. Previously, she was Marie Claire's style editor, where she wrote shopping e-commerce guides and seasonal trend reports, assisted with the market for fashion photo shoots, and assigned and edited fashion celebrity news.

Emma also wrote for The Zoe Report, Editorialist, Elite Daily, Bustle, and Mission Magazine. She studied Fashion Studies and New Media at Fordham University Lincoln Center and launched her own magazine, Childs Play Magazine, in 2015 as a creative pastime. When she's not waxing poetic about niche fashion topics, you'll find her stalking eBay for designer vintage, reading literary fiction on her Kindle, and baking banana bread in her tiny NYC kitchen.