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Budget Monday · Undergarments May 11, 2026
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Why You Should

Aerie Real Me Seamless Boybrief Review CA$16.95

Introduction

The Aerie Real Me Seamless Boybrief has a specific job to do: disappear. Under ponte trousers, under bodycon dresses, under the kind of light spring fabrics that betray every seam and waistband you've ever trusted. At CA$16.95 a pair, it's asking for budget-tier money while promising premium-tier invisibility. That's not a small claim.

What makes this worth examining seriously — rather than dismissing as fast-fashion underwear — is the consistency of the feedback from Canadian buyers. Across ae.com, Amazon Canada, and Simons, the Real Me Seamless earns a 4.5-out-of-5 average not through novelty but through reliable, repeated performance. The 2026 spring colourways in lavender, blush, and butter yellow are genuinely appealing, but the stronger selling point is functional: this is a boybrief that performs as described under the fitted spring wardrobe most Canadian women are building right now.

It is not, however, without trade-offs. The nylon-dominant blend raises legitimate questions about breathability once temperatures climb past 20°C, and a few construction details deserve scrutiny before you commit to a ten-pack. This review covers all of it.


Price

CA$16.95 per unit at regular price across Simons, AEO Canada, and Amazon Canada.

That positions it squarely in the budget tier for seamless underwear in the Canadian market, where comparable seamless styles from mid-range brands typically run CA$22–CA$35 per unit. The more compelling entry point, however, is Aerie's recurring multi-pack promotion — the 10-for-CA$38 deal that appears frequently throughout the year and brings the per-unit cost down to CA$3.80. At that price, it's a genuinely different conversation.

Even at the single-unit retail price, CA$16.95 is defensible for a seamless knit that holds its shape through machine washing and resists colour fade across reorders. You are not paying for premium fibre content here — the nylon-elastane blend is functional, not luxurious — but the price reflects that honestly. This is not a product pretending to be something it isn't.


Materials and Construction

Fabric composition: 87% nylon, 13% elastane

The seamless knit construction is the defining feature. There are no cut-and-sewn seams, no overlocked edges, and no gusset seam — the entire brief is knitted as a single continuous piece and finished without the raised seam lines that create visible panty lines under stretch fabrics. Under fitted spring leggings or a bodycon dress in a light jersey, the difference between a seamless construction like this and a traditionally sewn brief is immediately visible. This one genuinely disappears.

The nylon-elastane ratio is worth understanding. Nylon at 87% gives you the four-way stretch, the moisture-wicking capability, and the smooth hand-feel that makes seamless underwear work under fitted clothing. It also gives you a fabric that is inherently less breathable than cotton. That is not a flaw unique to Aerie — it is simply the physics of the fibre. Every seamless brief on the market that achieves this level of stretch and low-profile construction relies on nylon or a similar synthetic. The trade-off is real and worth knowing before you buy.

The moisture-wicking finish is appropriate for Canadian spring conditions — layered outfits in March, bare-leg days in May — and buyers consistently report that the fabric handles the range without degrading. There is no gusset seam, which some buyers note can affect hygiene comfort over time; this is a personal consideration worth factoring in if it matters to your preferences.

Machine washable. Reviews indicate minimal shape loss after repeated washing, which at this price point is a concrete quality indicator.


Comfort

Day-to-day comfort is where the Real Me Seamless delivers most consistently, with one clear exception.

The four-way stretch accommodates sitting, commuting, and active movement without the brief shifting, bunching, or cutting in. The mid-rise waistband sits cleanly under high-rise denim and trousers without creating a second waistband ridge through lighter fabrics. For the fitted spring wardrobe — leggings, ponte trousers, bodycon midi dresses — this is exactly the behaviour you need from a seamless brief.

The leg band is the one construction detail that warrants attention. A subset of buyers report that the leg band rolls inward during high-activity wear — running errands, cycling, or longer walks. It is not a universal complaint, but it appears frequently enough in Canadian reviews to flag. If you are buying specifically for active use, this is a risk.

On breathability: below 20°C, the nylon blend performs well and the moisture-wicking finish earns its description. Once temperatures climb into the mid-20s and above — which in most Canadian cities begins in late May and June — the synthetic fabrication becomes noticeably warmer than cotton alternatives. If you run warm or live in a city where spring arrives aggressively, budget for a cotton option alongside this one rather than treating it as your only spring solution.

Buyers with sensitive skin or a history of yeast sensitivity should approach with caution. The nylon construction does not offer the breathability that cotton provides, and several Canadian reviewers specifically note this concern.


Fit and Sizing

Available in XS through XXL using standard North American sizing.

The seamless construction gives the fit more flexibility than a woven style would. Most buyers report accommodating a half-size in either direction without visible pulling or discomfort — meaning if you typically fall between a small and medium, either size is likely to work. That flexibility is a practical advantage when you're buying a multi-pack and sizing consistency matters.

Medium fits true to size based on consistent feedback from Amazon Canada and ae.com reviews. The XL–XXL range is where sizing runs slightly more critical: multiple reviewers in this range recommend sizing up one for optimal comfort around the hip and thigh. The waistband in particular can feel snug if you're between sizes on the larger end. If you carry volume in the hip or thigh, go up.

The lighter colourways — blush, cream, white — bear a specific mention for fit transparency: several buyers note that these shades can show through white or cream trousers when the trouser fabric is thin. This is not a sizing issue but a fabric-opacity issue, and it matters when styling.


How to Style It

1. The Spring Commute Outfit
Wear the boybrief under high-rise ponte trousers in camel or charcoal with a tucked-in cotton blouse and a light trench coat. The seamless construction handles the smooth stretch of ponte fabric without any visible line through the back panel — this is exactly the pairing it was designed for. Choose the lavender or blush colourway if your trousers have any transparency; the pastels read as closer to skin-neutral than stark white would.

2. The Leggings-and-Layer Look
Under compression or fitted leggings for a Saturday that involves both a farmers' market run and a yoga class, pair the boybrief with a longline knit cardigan and white sneakers. The four-way stretch of the brief moves with the legging rather than against it, and the seamless silhouette means nothing interrupts the line of the legging through the hip and seat. The butter yellow colourway adds a small, private nod to the spring palette without requiring you to commit to it outwardly.

3. The Bodycon Dress Edit
For a spring event — a brunch, a wedding shower, a gallery opening — under a fitted midi dress in jersey or scuba fabric, this is the brief you reach for. The seamless knit creates a completely smooth silhouette front, back, and through the hip. Keep the colourway neutral (nude or blush) under anything in white, cream, or pastel. At CA$16.95, this is a practical investment for an outfit that cost considerably more.


Alternatives

1. Knix Dream Boyshort — CA$22–CA$28 per unit
Available directly at knix.com and at select Simons locations. Knix's Dream Boyshort uses a cotton-modal blend rather than nylon, which addresses the breathability concern directly. The trade-off is a slightly thicker profile that is less invisible under very fitted fabrics. If breathability is your priority and you're willing to pay slightly more, this is the natural Canadian alternative. Knix also carries inclusive sizing through 9X, making it a stronger option for buyers who find Aerie's XXL insufficient.

2. Le Château Seamless Hipster (via Amazon Canada) — CA$14.99–CA$18.99
Available through Amazon Canada and periodically through Hudson's Bay online. A comparable seamless nylon-elastane brief at a similar or slightly lower price point. Construction quality is less consistent across colourways, and the waistband tends to be thinner — useful for some fits, less durable over time. A reasonable single-pack trial if you want a comparison point before committing to an Aerie multi-pack.

3. Lululemon Wundermost Ultra-Soft Nulu Shortie — CA$38 per unit
Available at lululemon.com and all Canadian lululemon standalone stores. At more than double the price of the Aerie boybrief, the Wundermost is not a budget alternative — it's the premium benchmark. The Nulu fabric offers a noticeably softer hand-feel and the construction is more refined, particularly around the leg band. If leg band rolling is a dealbreaker for you and you're willing to pay for it, this is where to look. Otherwise, the Aerie brief delivers most of the performance at a fraction of the cost.


Pros

  • **Genuinely seamless construction** eliminates visible panty lines under fitted spring fabrics — leggings, ponte trousers, and bodycon dresses in particular. This is not a marketing claim; it performs as described and buyers confirm it consistently.
  • **Four-way stretch moves with the body** across a full spring day of commuting, movement, and varied activity without shifting, bunching, or cutting in at the leg or waist.
  • **Colour accuracy and consistency across reorders** is notably reliable — a practical advantage when you're building a multi-pack wardrobe staple and need colourways to match across separate purchases.
  • **Machine washable with minimal shape loss** over time, which at CA$16.95 per unit makes the cost-per-wear calculation genuinely favourable over six to twelve months of regular use.
  • **Cross-seasonal usefulness for Canadian spring conditions** — the moisture-wicking nylon blend handles both the layered, colder days of March and the warmer transition days of May without requiring you to swap to a different brief style mid-season.
  • **Budget pricing with frequent multi-pack promotions** (10 for CA$38) make this one of the most cost-effective seamless options available at Canadian retail.

Cons

  • **Nylon-dominant blend is less breathable than cotton** once temperatures exceed approximately 20°C. On warm late-spring days, the synthetic fabrication traps heat in a way that cotton does not. This is an inherent fibre limitation, not a manufacturing defect, but it is real.
  • **Light colourways — blush, white, cream — can show through thin white or cream trousers.** The fabric opacity is insufficient for truly sheer spring trouserlegweight fabrics. This limits styling options in the very season the brief is positioned for.
  • **Leg band rolls on some buyers during high-activity wear.** Appearing frequently enough in Canadian reviews to be a pattern, particularly noted during cycling, running, and extended walking. Not universal, but not rare.
  • **Waistband runs snug for buyers between sizes, particularly in the XL–XXL range.** Sizing up is the recommended workaround, but it means the stated sizing cannot be trusted entirely at the larger end of the range.
  • **Not suitable for buyers with sensitive skin or yeast sensitivity.** The nylon construction offers limited breathability and is not an appropriate everyday choice for anyone with a documented synthetic-fabric sensitivity.

Current Price

CA$16.95

Available at Simons.com

Buy It Now →

Price verified as of May 11, 2026. WYS may earn a commission on purchases.

The WYS Verdict

✓  Buy It

The Aerie Real Me Seamless Boybrief does exactly what it promises at a price that makes the trade-offs acceptable. The 360-degree seamless construction is legitimate — it disappears under the fitted spring wardrobe in a way that justifies buying multiples. The four-way stretch holds up across a full day of varied movement, the colour accuracy across reorders is reliable, and at CA$16.95 per unit — or CA$3.80 on promotion — the cost-per-wear over a full season of regular use is genuinely strong.

The limitations are real, not trivial. Nylon's breathability ceiling means this brief becomes uncomfortable as spring tips into summer heat. The leg band rolling issue is consistent enough to flag for anyone buying specifically for active use. And buyers at the larger end of the size range need to size up, which means the printed size guide cannot be taken at face value.

What this brief is not: a year-round solution, a cotton alternative, or an option for anyone with synthetic-fabric sensitivities. What it is: the most cost-effective seamless boybrief available at Canadian retail for the specific purpose of invisible wear under fitted spring clothing. For that purpose, it earns its recommendation.

Score: 7.8 out of 10

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Aerie Real Me Seamless Boybrief worth buying?

Yes, the product scores 7.8/10 and earns a consistent 4.5-out-of-5 average across multiple Canadian retailers. At CA$16.95, it delivers reliable day-to-day comfort and invisibility under fitted clothing without relying on novelty to justify its price.

What size should I order if I'm between sizes?

The seamless construction allows most buyers to accommodate a half-size in either direction without visible pulling or discomfort, so if you fall between a small and medium, either size is likely to work. Medium fits true to size based on consistent feedback from Amazon Canada and ae.com reviews.

How does the four-way stretch perform during daily wear?

The four-way stretch accommodates sitting, commuting, and active movement without the brief shifting, bunching, or cutting in. The mid-rise waistband sits cleanly under high-rise denim and lighter fabrics without creating a visible second waistband ridge.

What should I know about the leg band construction?

The leg band is the one construction detail that warrants attention, as a subset of buyers have reported concerns with this area. The article does not recommend a specific alternative competing product.