Shipping & Delivery
| Method | Delivery Time | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Shipping | Shown during checkout | Calculated at checkout |
| Returns | See store policy | Terms vary by store |
Check the product page, checkout and store policies for the terms that apply to your order.
| Method | Delivery Time | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Shipping | Shown during checkout | Calculated at checkout |
| Returns | See store policy | Terms vary by store |
Check the product page, checkout and store policies for the terms that apply to your order.
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Most people buy active shorts once, hate them for a specific reason, and then buy the same type again with slightly different branding. The inseam is usually where things go wrong first. A 7-inch inseam feels fine in the fitting room and ri
Most people buy active shorts once, hate them for a specific reason, and then buy the same type again with slightly different branding. The inseam is usually where things go wrong first. A 7-inch inseam feels fine in the fitting room and rides up to a 4-inch effective inseam the moment you hit a lunge. A 5-inch inseam that sits correctly on a 5'10" frame becomes genuinely impractical on someone shorter. Before fabric, before waistband, before any feature the product page leads with — get the inseam right for your activity.
Running generally wants something in the 5-to-7-inch range. Weightlifting, especially squatting, benefits from a 7-to-9-inch inseam because the fabric has somewhere to go when you're in the hole. Cycling shorts are a different category entirely and shouldn't be treated as interchangeable with gym shorts even when they look similar on a hanger.
Polyester-spandex blends dominate the market for a reason — they hold compression, they wick, and they survive a washing machine better than most natural fibers. A standard performance blend sits somewhere around 80-88% polyester with the remainder being elastane or spandex. That ratio matters. Below 12% spandex, you start losing recovery, meaning the fabric doesn't snap back to shape after repeated stress. After a year of hard use, low-spandex shorts bag out at the inner thigh and around the waistband, and no amount of washing fixes it.
Nylon-spandex blends feel noticeably softer against skin and handle lateral movement better, which is why they show up in yoga and Pilates shorts more than in running shorts. The tradeoff is durability under abrasion — nylon pills faster than polyester when it contacts a rough surface repeatedly, like a bike seat or a weight bench with exposed seams.
Cotton-blend shorts exist in this category and they have exactly one appropriate use case: low-intensity activity or recovery days where you're not sweating hard. Cotton holds moisture. A cotton short that's wet from a real workout takes hours to dry and will stay in contact with your skin the entire time. If that's acceptable, fine. If you run hot or train hard, it's not.
Compression shorts apply graduated pressure measured in millimeters of mercury, the same unit used in medical contexts. Light compression runs roughly 8-15 mmHg, which provides mild muscle support and reduces the perception of fatigue during moderate activity. Medium compression sits around 18-25 mmHg — this is the range most general-purpose performance shorts target, and it's where you'll feel genuine difference in quad and hamstring stability during longer efforts. Anything above 30 mmHg starts to cross into therapeutic territory and usually requires a specific fit recommendation.
The failure mode with high-compression shorts is buying them too small because they feel supportive in-store. A short that's compressing you correctly shouldn't require effort to pull on, and it shouldn't leave visible indentation marks on your skin after an hour of wear. Both of those are signs the compression level is wrong for your body, not signs that it's "working."
A wide waistband — anything above two inches — distributes pressure better and doesn't fold or roll during dynamic movement. Folding waistbands are the single most common complaint on returns of active shorts, and it's almost always a combination of wrong size and insufficient waistband stiffness. A waistband with internal silicone grip solves rolling for most body types, but not all — if you carry weight in your midsection, the grip can create an uncomfortable pressure line rather than a stable hold.
Built-in liners divide people sharply. A liner with a gusset — the diamond-shaped insert at the crotch — allows full range of motion without chafing and eliminates the need for separate compression underlayers in most conditions. A liner without a gusset is mostly decorative. Check this before buying; the product page won't always make it clear.
Active shorts are not a solved product. The features that make a short excellent for one body type or activity often make it mediocre for another. A short with an aggressive compression level and high-rise waistband that works beautifully for someone training HIIT five days a week may be genuinely uncomfortable for someone using it for occasional walking. There's no configuration that's neutral. You're always making tradeoffs between compression and comfort, inseam length and modesty, fabric softness and durability. The best you can do is get clear on your primary use case and buy toward that, accepting that the short won't be universal.
Side pockets on active shorts are almost never big enough for a modern phone unless the listing specifically mentions phone pocket capacity. A pocket that holds a key or a card is not a phone pocket. This sounds obvious but it accounts for an outsized share of practical disappointment in this category. If you run with your phone, look for a rear zippered pocket or a side pocket with a listed depth — anything under 7 inches is probably not going to work for a standard-sized phone.
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Quick checklist before you buy