Joggers have a build problem, or more accurately, they have a problem convincing men that their build isn’t the issue. The reality is that most joggers are cut for one body type and styled on one body type, which means a lot of men write them off before they’ve found the right one. We’ve been paying close attention to waistband construction, leg taper, and fabric weight, because those three things are what determine whether a jogger works on a broader frame or a leaner one or anywhere in between. The ones we’ve pulled together here tend to sit at the waist rather than the hip, use fabric with enough structure to hold a clean line, and taper in a way that reads as intentional rather than athletic. They work at home. They work for a low key errand. Some of them, paired with the right sneaker and a decent sweatshirt, work harder than that. Build is rarely the obstacle people think it is.