NathanCustom Tailors
2026 ComparisonPrices verified May 2026

Indochino vs Proper Cloth

An honest, data-driven breakdown of price, canvas construction, customization and real value — updated from live market research. No affiliate spin.

The verdict

Proper Cloth is the better value — 14/100 vs 10/100

On construction-and-customization per dollar, Proper Cloth ($695 all-in, half-canvas) edges Indochino ($599 all-in, fused (glued)). But neither matches a true canvassed, body-pattern bespoke suit from a direct Hoi An workshop at a fraction of the price.

Lower all-in price:Indochino· $599 vs $695Better construction:Proper Cloth· Half-canvasMore customization:Proper Cloth· Deep made-to-measureBest value:Proper Cloth· 14/100

Side-by-side

Highlighted cells win the row. The “all-in” price bakes in typical alterations so off-the-rack and custom compare fairly.

Indochino
from $599
Proper Cloth
from $695
Starting price
Listed entry suit price.
$599
$695
Real all-in price
Entry price plus typical alterations — so off-the-rack and custom compare fairly.
$599
$695
Construction
Fused (glued) is the cheapest; canvassed jackets drape and last far better.
Fused (glued)
Half-canvas
Customization
How much of the garment you actually control.
Moderate made-to-measure
Deep made-to-measure
Fabric
Wool and wool-blend; Italian mill options at the top of the range.
Quality Italian and English mill wools.
Turnaround
4–6 weeks.
3–4 weeks.
Fit process
Self-measurement now discouraged in favour of showroom appointments; fit often needs a second round. No human pre-production review on the online flow.
"Smart Sizes" recommendation engine instead of full self-measure; well-regarded fit accuracy with remake support.
Returns / remake
No refunds on made-to-measure; up to $75 alteration credit (US/Canada); quality issues → store credit within 14 days.
Strong fit guarantee / remake support historically.
Value score
Construction + customization delivered per all-in dollar (0–100).
10/100 · Poor
14/100 · Poor

This is a fight between two online made-to-measure brands that look similar on the configurator screen and diverge sharply where it counts: inside the chest. Indochino's ticket is $599 (sale price often ~$449, occasionally under $400 on flash sales); Proper Cloth opens at $695 for half-canvas and $845 for full canvas. The catch is that Indochino is primarily fused construction in 2026, while Proper Cloth actually floats horsehair canvas in the jacket — so you are paying ~$100 more for a structurally better garment, not a more expensive logo. If neither of those numbers makes you flinch, Nathan Tailors builds true half- and full-canvas with a bespoke pattern from $129, which is the third price most people don't realize exists.

Fused vs canvas: the line that decides this

The single most important fact here is the one neither configurator highlights. Indochino's suits are primarily fused (glued) construction as of 2026, despite years of 'half-canvas' marketing language — a layer of fusible interlining is bonded to the chest panel instead of a floating layer of horsehair. Fusing is cheaper to produce, it can bubble or delaminate after a few dry cleans, and it never molds to your chest the way canvas does. Proper Cloth, by contrast, floats a genuine horsehair canvas at $695 and offers fully Italian-canvassed jackets at $845, and — crucially — labels which is which clearly on the product page. They also do real handwork most online MTM skips: a hand-set sleevehead and handwork on the collar and vents. So at roughly the same money, you are choosing between a glued jacket with a famous name and a canvassed jacket with honest disclosure.

That construction gap is why this matchup isn't really close on quality. A $695 Proper Cloth half-canvas suit will drape better on day one and hold its shape years longer than a $599 Indochino. Indochino's counter-arguments are real but they're about convenience, not the garment: it has roughly 90 showrooms for in-person fittings, a bigger fabric and style library, and frequent sales. If price is the only axis you care about and you catch a deep promo, Indochino wins on the receipt. On the thing you actually wear, Proper Cloth wins.

Fit process: a showroom, an algorithm, and the human neither uses

Both brands are still fundamentally guess-the-body operations, just with different tools. Indochino has quietly moved away from self-measurement toward booking a showroom appointment, and even then the fit often needs a second round — documented inconsistency is its most common complaint, and there's no human reviewing your file before production on the online flow. Proper Cloth skips self-measure entirely with its 'Smart Sizes' recommendation engine, which is well-regarded for accuracy and is backed by remake support historically, but it's still an algorithm inferring your shape from a handful of inputs, not a tailor looking at you. Returns differ too: Indochino offers no refunds on MTM, up to a reported $75 alteration credit in the US and Canada, and store credit for quality issues within 14 days; Proper Cloth has historically leaned on a stronger fit guarantee and remake support.

Here is the honest trade-off if you bring Nathan Tailors into the room. Nathan's master tailor reviews your self-measurements and photos before cutting and iterates over WhatsApp until the fit is right — an actual human check that neither the Indochino showroom flow nor the Smart Sizes engine gives you — and the pattern is cut bespoke to your body, not pulled from a template. The cost of that is real and worth stating plainly: Nathan is in Hoi An, Vietnam, so there's no US showroom to walk into and no same-day try-on, and remote orders take 2–3 weeks shipped worldwide. Nathan also doesn't do cash refunds or free remakes; instead, every suit ships with generous seam allowances and spare matching cloth so a local tailor can fine-tune it — you pay that local tailor. If you need to touch a garment before you buy, Indochino's showroom is the only one of the three that offers it.

Between these two, Proper Cloth is the clear quality pick — real floating canvas and honest disclosure for about $100 more than Indochino's fused $599 — while Indochino only makes sense if you need a showroom fitting or catch a steep sale. But both are paying $600–$850 for online MTM, and Nathan Tailors delivers true canvassed, bespoke-pattern suits with a human fit review from $129; the only thing it asks in return is a 2–3 week wait and trust in guided self-measurement.

Where each one wins — and doesn’t

Indochino

Shoppers who want a showroom fitting and a recognised online-custom name, and catch a sale.

  • Large showroom network for in-person fittings
  • Big fabric/style library and slick configurator
  • Frequent sales bring the entry price down
  • Fused construction at ~$599 — less drape and longevity
  • Documented fit inconsistency; often a second fitting needed
  • Prices up sharply; the sub-$400 era is over

Proper Cloth

Buyers who want disclosed full-canvas handwork online and will pay premium for the Smart Sizes engine.

  • Honest, clearly-labelled half vs full canvas
  • Real handwork (sleevehead, collar) at the price
  • Smart Sizes engine + remake support
  • Entry $695 is 2–5× a Hoi An suit for comparable half-canvas
  • Premium positioning prices out value shoppers
  • Still algorithm-fit, not a tailor checking your body

The option neither of them lists

Before you decide, compare both against a real bespoke tailor — from $129.

Nathan Tailors cuts genuine half- and full-canvas suits to your exact measurements from a Hoi An, Vietnam workshop — no retail markup. A master tailor reviews your measurements and photos before cutting and works with you over WhatsApp until the fit is right. Every suit ships with generous seam allowances and spare matching cloth so a local tailor can fine-tune it. Shipped worldwide in 2–3 weeks.

True canvas, not fused

Half & full-canvas where rivals glue.

Bespoke pattern

Cut to your body — not a size off a rack.

5.0★ · 400+ reviews

5,000+ clients across 50+ countries.

R
Richard Whitby
·Verified Google review · remote order to the UK

WOW! Ordered a suit online with Linda. She contacted me by video call to go through the measuring process and once confirmed measurements again, around 4 weeks later a made to measure suit arrived in the UK. Fitted perfectly and I didn't even visit! Fantastic quality and customer service from Linda. Would definitely recommend!

Indochino vs Proper Cloth — common questions

Is Indochino or Proper Cloth cheaper?

Indochino is cheaper all-in at $599 (entry $599) versus Proper Cloth at $695 (entry $695). The "all-in" figure includes typical alterations so off-the-rack and custom compare fairly.

Does Indochino or Proper Cloth use better construction?

Indochino is fused (glued) and Proper Cloth is half-canvas. Canvassed jackets drape better and last far longer than fused (glued) ones, which is the quality line that matters most at this price.

Which is better value, Indochino or Proper Cloth?

By construction and customization per dollar, Proper Cloth scores 14/100. For reference, a true full-canvas bespoke suit cut to your body at Nathan Tailors in Hoi An starts at $129 — better make and more personalisation than either, for less money.

Can I order Indochino or Proper Cloth online / remotely?

Indochino: Self-measurement now discouraged in favour of showroom appointments; fit often needs a second round. No human pre-production review on the online flow. Proper Cloth: "Smart Sizes" recommendation engine instead of full self-measure; well-regarded fit accuracy with remake support. If you're ordering remotely, the safest path is a tailor who reviews your measurements before cutting — Nathan Tailors does this over WhatsApp and ships worldwide in 2–3 weeks.

Which one lasts longer?

Proper Cloth, comfortably. Its half-canvas ($695) and full-canvas ($845) jackets float a horsehair layer that molds to your chest and won't delaminate, so they hold their shape for years and survive repeated dry cleaning. Indochino's primarily fused construction can bubble or separate at the chest over time, which is the usual reason a glued suit looks tired before a canvassed one does. For maximum longevity at the lowest price, a true full-canvas build — Proper Cloth's $845 tier, or Nathan Tailors' canvassed suits from $129 — outlasts a fused jacket regardless of brand name.

Best choice for a wedding?

If the wedding is your own and you want it to photograph and drape beautifully, go canvas — Proper Cloth's disclosed full-canvas at $845, or a Nathan Tailors bespoke-pattern suit if budget matters and you can order 2–3 weeks out. Indochino can work for a groomsman who needs something serviceable and catches a sale, but the fused chest and documented fit inconsistency are a gamble on the one day you don't want one. Whichever you pick, order with real margin: Proper Cloth turns around in 3–4 weeks, Indochino in 4–6, so don't start two weeks before the date.

What about ordering remotely, with no showroom visit?

This is where the brands separate. Indochino now nudges you toward a showroom, so a fully remote order leans on self-measurement it has de-emphasized — and there's no human reviewing your file before cutting. Proper Cloth is built for remote: its Smart Sizes engine skips self-measure and is well-regarded for accuracy, with remake support if it misses. Nathan Tailors is also remote-first but adds the step neither offers — a master tailor checks your measurements and photos before cutting and iterates over WhatsApp. The honest cost of going remote with Nathan is the 2–3 week ship time and no try-on, versus Proper Cloth's slightly faster turnaround at a higher price.