Winter Beanies

Skip to results list

Active filters:

Availability
Price
to
The highest price is $42
Clear
Fabric
Gender
Size
278 items
Column grid
Column grid

Filter

Active filters:

Availability
Price
to
The highest price is $42
Fabric
Gender
Size

The beanie is the world's most widely worn cold-weather hat — a statistic supported by the simplicity of the form: a knitted tube that stretches to fit, covers the ears and forehead, provides genuine thermal insulation and packs into a pocket. No other winter hat matches this combination of simplicity, packability, versatility and thermal effectiveness at equivalent cost. Every other cold-weather hat — the trapper, the flat cap, the fedora — involves compromises that the beanie does not.

Beanie quality varies enormously. An acrylic beanie and a merino wool beanie may look identical at first glance but differ significantly in warmth, moisture management and comfort against skin. Merino wool naturally regulates temperature (warmer when cold, not overheating when active), wicks moisture from the scalp, and does not itch despite being animal fibre. Acrylic beanies are warm, machine washable and durable but accumulate odour and moisture more than merino in sustained wear. The right choice depends on use context: acrylic for everyday commuting and casual wear; merino for active outdoor use in variable conditions.

Hatloom winter beanies are available in merino wool, wool blends, acrylic knit and fleece-lined versions — for men, women and children.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the warmest beanie material?

The warmest beanie materials are: chunky-knit merino wool (warmest natural option, also moisture-regulating), thick acrylic knit (very warm, machine washable), Thinsulate-lined beanies (warmest for the weight — thin outer shell with technical insulation), and fleece-lined wool beanies (combining wool's warmth with fleece's softness and additional insulation). For temperatures below −10°C, a fleece-lined merino or Thinsulate-lined beanie is appropriate. For UK winter conditions (0–10°C), a standard mid-weight merino or chunky acrylic knit beanie provides sufficient warmth for most wearers.

How do you wear a beanie?

A beanie can be worn pulled down fully over the ears (maximum warmth, standard orientation in cold weather), rolled up once or twice to sit above the ears (fashion orientation, less warmth), or halfway between — sitting at the top of the ears. For outdoor activity in cold conditions, wear the beanie pulled fully over the ears — the ears are a significant heat-loss point. A beanie can be positioned forward for full forehead coverage or pushed back for a casual tilt with more forehead exposed. There is no wrong way to wear a beanie — the only functional consideration is whether the ears are covered in cold weather.

How do you wash a wool beanie?

Hand wash a wool beanie in cold water with a wool-specific detergent — no rubbing, gentle squeezing only. Rinse in cold water (temperature changes cause felting). Do not wring — press excess water out gently. Reshape to the correct dimensions while damp and dry flat on a clean towel, away from direct heat or sunlight. Most merino wool beanies from quality producers can be machine washed on a delicate/wool cycle at 30°C if specified on the care label. Never tumble dry a wool beanie — the heat and agitation will felt and shrink it irreversibly.