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The Hermès Sandal Price Guide 2026: All Prices Explained

Getting clarity on Hermès footwear costs in 2026 requires navigating a few different layers: official brand prices by model and region, the factors that create pricing variation within the range, resale market pricing dynamics, and how geography influences the most favorable pricing. This guide offers that complete picture.

US Retail Prices for 2026: Style by Style

US retail pricing for Hermès sandals in 2026 is detailed below. These prices are approximate and subject to change and subject to change without notice: the Hermès Oran sandal in standard leathers (Epsom, Swift) retails at roughly $780–$820 depending on the exact configuration. The Hermès Izmir sandal in standard leathers prices at roughly $760 to $800. Platform Oran and Izmir configurations start at roughly $950 and sometimes reach $1,100 to $1,300 or more for elevated heights or premium materials. Exotic-material Hermès sandals — lizard, crocodile, or ostrich — start around $2,500 and can go well above $5,000 for the rarest and most complex configurations. Seasonal footwear releases beyond the standard Oran and Izmir vary widely — typically $900–$1,800 depending on materials and construction.

One important pricing note: Hermès never discounts at boutique. The prices above are the prices. No discounts, end-of-season events, or promotional pricing exist at Hermès retail. This is a deliberate brand strategy that keeps the monetary worth of every piece consistent — and it is one key cause that supports the Oran’s resale performance.

Leather Choice and Price: Price Variation by Material

Within the same sandal style, the most important pricing variable after the sandal type itself is the leather type. Regular-color versions in Epsom or Swift are the most accessibly priced configurations — these are the base Oran price points ($780–$820 for the Oran). Exotics are at the opposite extreme: crocodile Hermès Orans can exceed $10,000 for the highest-quality crocodile examples. Between these poles, special calfskin options like Barenia occupy a position above standard calfskin but below exotic — usually 10–20% above to the Epsom or Swift price. Color also creates minor price variation: standard neutrals (Noir, Gold, hermes chypre sandals men Étoupe) are at the lowest price point, while complex colors requiring additional dyeing or finishing steps — some vivid shades or bicolor designs — can carry a small premium.

Prices by Country

The Hermès Oran is priced differently in different markets. The key drivers of market-by-market price variation are regional taxes, import costs, and regional brand pricing. France consistently offers the best pre-tax retail pricing: the French retail price for the standard Oran in 2026 is approximately €680–€720 (before the VAT refund is applied). After VAT refund for non-EU visitors, the cost falls to around €580–€620 — around $620–$680 at exchange rates in early 2026. This represents a meaningful saving relative to US retail of $780–$820.

Style US Retail (2026) France Retail (€, excl. VAT) UK Retail (£) With VAT Refund (approx. USD)
Oran (Epsom/Swift) $780–$820 €680–€720 £680–£720 ~$620–$680
Izmir (Epsom/Swift) $760–$800 €660–€700 £660–£700 ~$600–$660
Platform Oran (standard leathers) $950–$1,100 €840–€960 £840–£960 ~$760–$870
Specialty calfskin (Barenia, etc.) $900–$1,000 €780–€870 £780–£870 ~$700–$790
Exotic leathers $2,500+ €2,200+ £2,000+ ~$2,000+

Pre-Owned Hermès Sandal Prices

The resale market pricing for Hermès sandals in 2026 reflects the same principles as the general luxury resale market: condition, availability, and demand are the three primary price drivers. For standard color Epsom Orans in excellent condition, resale pricing on verified platforms typically sits at 90–100% of US retail. Good condition with slight signs of use typically reach 75–85% of the retail price. Well-worn but still presentable pairs in acceptable condition may fetch just 60–70%. For limited-edition, discontinued, or exotic-material versions, above-retail pricing is the norm: Barenia, discontinued vivid colors, and exotic leathers consistently sell at 110 to 150 percent of initial retail price. According to Business of Fashion‘s premium goods resale coverage for 2026, Hermès leads in every resale metric across all luxury fashion categories — not only sandals but all leather goods.

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