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Home > All Products > Corteiz > Corteiz Cargos
The Corteiz cargo is the silhouette that built the brand's reputation outside London. Wide-leg, military-cut, multi-pocketed, dropped on a 99p cargo van in Shoreditch in 2022 — and copied by every streetwear label since. This page is the full Corteiz cargos archive: Guerillaz, Storm, Mula, Yella, Megashuku, every Special Edition, every camo and earth-tone colorway. In stock, ready to ship worldwide.
The Cargo That Defined Corteiz's Global Reach

The Cargo That Defined Corteiz's Global Reach

If the Alcatraz hoodie made Corteiz famous in West London, the Guerillaz cargo made it famous everywhere else. The brand's first true international viral moment came in August 2022 , when Clint 419 parked a cargo van in Shoreditch, London, and sold the cargos directly off the back for 99p each . Within hours, the queue stretched around two blocks. The footage hit TikTok and Twitter the same evening. By the next morning, "Corteiz cargo pants" was being searched in dozens of countries that had never heard of the brand.

What made the cargo work — and what's kept it copied for three years — is the cut. Where 90% of streetwear cargos run slim or tapered, the Corteiz Guerillaz cuts deliberately wide through the leg , stacks at the ankle when paired with low-top sneakers, and carries a heavy military-grade utility pocket on each side that actually fits a phone, wallet, and keys without bulging. It's a working cargo, not a fashion cargo.

That distinction — utility-first, then graphic — runs through every variation on this page. Guerillaz, Storm, Mula, Megashuku — each is a riff on the same wide-leg, side-pocket logic, dressed in different fabrics, colorways, and seasonal treatments.
Iconic Corteiz Cargos: The Sub-Series Map

Iconic Corteiz Cargos: The Sub-Series Map

The cargos archive splits into seven distinct sub-series. Knowing the difference is half the buying decision.

Guerillaz Cargos (The Original)

The flagship. Released FW22, retailing $135 originally. Cotton-spandex-polyester blend, wide-leg cut, Alcatraz logo embroidered on the crotch in contrast colour, four-button fly, elastic waistband with adjustable belt. Side cargo pockets with branded patches reading "Corteiz Guerillaz." If a Corteiz cargo enters a conversation without further qualifier, it's a Guerillaz. Triple Black, Black/White, Black/Red, Black/Yellow, Stone, Digi Camo, Woodland Camo are the running colorways — Triple Black is the most-resold on StockX.

Storm Cargos

The lighter sibling. Slightly thinner cotton weight than the Guerillaz, same wide-leg cut, but with a more relaxed pocket construction — less utility-heavy, more drape-led. Released in seasonal colorways including Salmon, Olive, and Stone. The Storm is what most fans buy as theirsecondpair of Corteiz cargos, after the Guerillaz Triple Black.

Mula Guerillaz Cargos

The minimalist take. Same Guerillaz silhouette, but with the branding pulled back — smaller logo placement, cleaner pocket flap stitching, no contrast crotch panel. Mula reads quieter on the street, which is why it's the Corteiz cargo that crosses over best into smart-casual fits. Black/Green is the running colorway.

Yella & Purp Guerillaz (Color-Forward Editions)

The vibrancy drops. Yella Guerillaz is Black/Yellow color-blocking with the standard Guerillaz silhouette intact. Purp Guerillaz runs Black/Purple. These are the cargos for fans who don't want a black-on-black fit — built to be the loudest piece in any outfit. Pair with neutral hoodies and tees so the cargos do the work.

4 Starz & 5 Starz Special Edition Guerillaz

The anniversary editions. Each year Corteiz drops a special-edition Guerillaz with crown-and-stars detailing — 4 Starz for the fourth anniversary, 5 Starz for the fifth. Construction is identical to the standard Guerillaz; the difference is in the embroidered detail and limited colourway access. Treated as commemorative pieces — collectors hold these unworn.

Megashuku Bottoms (The Rustic Heavyweight)

The cargo's heaviest, most workwear-leaning sibling. Released as the Rustic Megashuku, this is not technically a Guerillaz cargo — it's a separately cut bottom with utility detailing in the same family. Heavier fabric, slightly different pocket placement, designed for the colder months when the Guerillaz cotton runs thin. Note:Megashuku(bottoms) shouldn't be confused withShukushuku(tracksuit) — they're related-named but separately catalogued.

Camo Editions (Digi Camo & Woodland Camo)

The military-print drops. Digi Camo (released SS22) uses a digital-pixel camouflage; Woodland Camo runs a more traditional broken-up forest pattern. Both are constructed on the standard Guerillaz silhouette with the same cargo pocket and waist hardware. These are the most "Corteiz" of all the Corteiz cargos in terms of brand DNA — the camo treatments lean directly into the brand's military-utility aesthetic.

The Wide-Leg Question: How to Pick Your First Pair

The first Corteiz cargo decision isn't which sub-series — it's whether the wide-leg cut is right for your existing wardrobe.

The Corteiz wide-leg fits over almost any shoe.Air Max 95s, Jordan 1s, Travis Scott Jordans, even chunky boots — the leg opening is wide enough that the hem stacks naturally without bunching. If you wear slim-cut sneakers (Adidas Sambas, low-profile runners), the wide-leg can over-drape — in that case, size down one and use the belt to tighten the waist.

Three first-pair recommendations by use case:
→Most versatile— Guerillaz Triple Black. Goes with every Corteiz hoodie, every tee, every jacket. The default first cargo.

→Most distinctive— Guerillaz Digi Camo or Woodland Camo. Reads "Corteiz" from across the street, no logo needed. Better as a statement piece than a daily.

→Most wearable in non-streetwear contexts— Mula Guerillaz Black/Green. Quietest branding, works with button-ups and overshirts beyond the standard hoodie pairing.

If this is your first Corteiz piece overall (not just first cargo), pair it with a Triple Black or White Alcatraz tee from the  Corteiz t-shirt collection to build the foundation of the fit, then layer up from there.

Corteiz Cargos Sizing

Corteiz Cargos Sizing

The cargos run true to size at the waist, deliberately wide through the leg— that wide-leg drape is the design, not a sizing miss. Two specifics worth knowing:

Waist.The elastic waistband + adjustable belt combination fits a range within one label size. Order based on your jean waist measurement; the belt tightens the rest. A Medium fits a 30-32" waist comfortably, a Large fits 32-34", and so on.

Leg.Wide through the thigh, wide through the knee, slightly tapered toward the ankle (but still wide enough to stack on most sneakers). If you want a slimmer cargo silhouette,size down one and let the belt do the workat the waist. This is the inside-knowledge move on the Guerillaz.

Length.The cargos are cut for someone 5'9"-6'1" to wear without alteration — they'll stack a little at the ankle, which is the intended look. Above 6'2", the leg may sit shorter than expected; below 5'8", expect significant pooling at the ankle.

→ Full Corteiz Sizing Guide (2026)
Why Buy Corteiz Cargos at Hipstersbuy

Why Buy Corteiz Cargos at Hipstersbuy

Original Corteiz Guerillaz cargos retailed at $135 in FW22 and have only gone up since. Triple Black Guerillaz currently lists $110-250 on eBay and StockX in pre-owned condition; new-with-tags Black/Yellow Yella Guerillaz hit $150 and the Black/Red Guerillaz crosses $250 regularly. The 99p Shoreditch drop that made these famous was a one-time event — for everyone who didn't queue around the block in August 2022, getting a pair has meant resale prices ever since.

Our CRTZ-style cargos collection carries the full Guerillaz silhouette range — every sub-series, every camo, every colourway — at $49-69 per pair with worldwide shipping. Wide-leg, four-button fly, side cargo pockets, embroidered Alcatraz on the crotch, branded pocket-flap patches. The same cut that made Corteiz a global brand, in stock without a queue.

→See the full Corteiz Clothing collection

What's the difference between Corteiz Guerillaz, Storm, and Mula cargos?

All three use the same wide-leg cargo silhouette but differ in fabric weight, branding density, and use case. Guerillaz is the heaviest cotton-spandex blend with full Guerillaz patch branding — the flagship. Storm is lighter cotton with reduced pocket utility — better for warmer weather. Mula is identical to Guerillaz in cut but with minimal branding — the quieter, smart-casual cargo.

Are Corteiz cargos true to size?

True to size at the waist (the belt accommodates a range within one label size). The leg is intentionally wide-cut — that's the design. For a slimmer cargo silhouette, size down one and tighten with the belt. For the standard wide-leg drape, stay TTS.

How do Corteiz cargos compare to Corteiz cargo shorts?

The cargo trousers (this collection) are full-length wide-leg pants — Guerillaz, Storm, Mula, Megashuku, and the camo editions. The Corteiz cargo shorts are mid-thigh inseam shorts using a similar pocket logic but cut for summer wear. Most Corteiz fans build a year-round rotation by owning at least one full-length cargo and one cargo short.

What's the difference between Megashuku and Shukushuku?

Easy to confuse — different products. Megashuku is a cargo / heavyweight bottom, sold in this cargos collection. Shukushuku is a tracksuit (jacket and matching joggers), sold in the Corteiz tracksuits and hoodies collection. Megashuku ≠ Shukushuku.

Which Corteiz cargo is hardest to land?

By resale premium: the 4 Starz and 5 Starz Special Edition Guerillaz, followed by the Digi Camo SS22 release. By colourway: Triple Black (most wanted) and Black/Red (most resold above retail). The standard Black/White Guerillaz is the easiest to find at retail-adjacent pricing on the secondary market.

Can I buy Corteiz cargos shipped internationally?

The official Corteiz site primarily ships within the UK and operates members-only drops. Our Corteiz-inspired cargos collection ships worldwide — including the US, Canada, Europe, Australia, and most of Asia — at consistent retail pricing.