Why You Should
Dickies Fishersville Coaches Jacket Review 2026: Worth It?
Introduction
The coaches jacket has become the defining outer layer of the UK's summer 2026 festival circuit. Lightweight enough to fold into a tote bag, substantial enough to cut a silhouette over a sundress at dusk: it sits precisely in the gap between a denim jacket (too heavy for July) and a packable anorak (too utilitarian for a night at Primavera). Dickies has positioned the Fishersville directly into that gap at £75.
Dickies' workwear credibility operates differently from fashion brands trying to manufacture heritage. The boxy coaches cut, the functional hardware, the absence of logo overkill: these are consistent with what Dickies already does across its catalogue rather than a seasonal pivot towards streetwear. UK buyers, particularly the 20–35 cohort shopping on ASOS and following r/UKCM threads, have noticed. The Fishersville has drawn consistent comparisons to coaches jackets priced at £120–£150 from brands whose identity is purely aspirational.
The competitors here are not just other coaches jackets. The Fishersville competes with every lightweight layer a woman considers before a festival weekend: the barn jacket she already owns, the vintage MA-1 from a charity shop, the branded staff jacket bought for the aesthetic. The question this review answers is whether £75 solves the problem better than those options.
Price
At £75, the Fishersville is midrange for the coaches jacket category in the UK. The H&M equivalent sits around £35–£45 but uses a thinner shell with no mesh lining and skips the functional snap hardware entirely. Carhartt's OG Active Jacket, which competes on a similar heritage-workwear positioning, retails at £130–£150 depending on stockist. The Dickies price sits closer to the affordable end of the credible bracket.
The mesh lining is the detail that earns the price. Budget coaches jackets at £35–£45 are unlined or taffeta-lined, which becomes unwearable in the humid warmth of a July festival evening. The Fishersville's breathable interior is a functional specification that cheaper alternatives skip. For a piece that will be worn heavily across festival season and reach for again in late August, £75 is defensible.
Materials and Construction
The Fishersville shell is 65% polyester, 35% cotton poplin. Poplin is a plain-weave fabric with a fine rib texture: it sits crisper than a standard poly-cotton blend but lacks the softness of a pure cotton twill. The hand feel is structured rather than plush, with a slight sheen that reads as deliberate streetwear detail rather than cheap finish. The weight is noticeably lighter than a standard workwear jacket, which is the correct specification for a summer festival layer.
The mesh interior is the jacket's most consequential construction choice. Owners consistently report that the mesh lining allows air movement against the body in warm, humid conditions where a standard lining would trap heat immediately. The moisture-wicking mesh specification is confirmed in the product detail; its practical effectiveness is corroborated across verified purchaser reviews.
Snap-button closures are zinc-toned and sit flush when fastened. Verified purchasers note the snaps feel stiff out of the packaging and require repeated use before they click open and shut without effort: expect a two-to-three-week break-in period. The construction at the seams and pocket openings shows no reported stress failures across reviewed units. The poplin shell does crease when packed tightly, a limitation inherent to the fabric weave rather than a production defect.
Comfort
Out of the box, the Fishersville wears comfortably across the shoulders and back. The boxy silhouette means there is no pull or restriction across the bust or upper arms, and buyers across a range of body types report that the relaxed cut does not create pressure points at the sleeve seam. The mesh lining begins working immediately: owners consistently report the jacket remains wearable at temperatures up to around 18–20°C where a cotton-lined equivalent would become stifling.
The snap buttons are the only comfort friction in the early weeks. Verified purchasers note the stiffness requires deliberate pressure to fasten, which is mildly inconvenient when layering over bulkier outfits. This resolves with use.
For petite frames, the boxy silhouette can feel more voluminous than comfortable at larger sizes: the jacket hits at hip length and the drop shoulder can sit low on a shorter torso. Buyers in this range consistently find that sizing down corrects the shoulder placement and makes the jacket feel proportionate rather than overwhelming.
Fit and Sizing
Size down one from your usual UK size. The Fishersville runs large across the board, and this is not a case where the intentional oversized cut makes your normal size work: the shoulder seams drop noticeably further than a standard oversized fit on the size that nominally matches your measurements.
If you are a UK 12, buy the UK 10. If you are usually an XS in other brands, try the XS and be prepared to return if the shoulder seam sits below mid-deltoid. Petite buyers who are normally a UK 10–12 consistently report that XS gives the most wearable silhouette without drowning the frame. The ASOS fit guide recommends sizing down for a tailored look, but sizing down here is not about tailoring: it is about achieving the proportions the jacket is designed to create.
If you specifically want a very oversized, cocoon-style aesthetic for styling over cropped layers, true-to-size or even one size up works. That is a style decision, not a fit recommendation.
How to Style It
Festival day outfit: Wear the Fishersville in terracotta over a white broderie anglaise crop top, wide-leg ecru linen trousers, and tan leather sandals with a toe post. The terracotta jacket against the white top is the whole look. Keep jewellery minimal: a single gold chain at the neck is enough. Carry a small canvas tote rather than a structured bag.
Evening warm-weather layer: Pair the olive colourway over a fitted black slip dress with flat black mules. The contrast between the workwear jacket silhouette and the dressed-up slip creates the tension that makes the outfit work. Add white ankle socks with the mules if you want the current UK streetwear read; skip them for a cleaner finish.
Weekend errand outfit: Style the ecru version over a grey fitted ribbed vest tucked into mid-rise straight-leg dark-wash jeans. Finish with clean white trainers. The ecru coaches jacket over grey and dark denim is a neutral stack that photographs well and requires zero styling effort beyond the jacket itself.
Alternatives
Carhartt WIP OG Active Jacket (approx. £130, available at ASOS, END Clothing, Urban Outfitters UK): A heavier cotton-blend shell with Carhartt's established workwear credibility and a slightly more structured boxy cut. The construction quality is a step above the Fishersville, and the fit is more consistent across sizes. Choose this if you want a jacket that will outlast several festival seasons and do not object to the higher price.
Columbia Painted Peak Windbreaker (approx. £70, available at John Lewis, Go Outdoors UK): A fully windproof nylon shell with a lightweight packable construction. The Columbia trades the fashion-forward coaches silhouette for better wind and light-rain protection, making it the better choice if your festival weekends run into unpredictable British weather. Less streetwear-relevant styling, significantly more practical in a downpour.
ASOS Design Coaches Jacket (approx. £40–£50, ASOS UK): ASOS's own-brand coaches jackets hit similar silhouettes at a lower price point but use thinner, unlined shells that multiple reviewers describe as feeling cheap in hand. Buy the ASOS own-brand version only if budget is the deciding factor; otherwise, the Fishersville's mesh lining and Dickies construction justify the £25–£35 difference.
Pros
Cons
Current Price
£75.00
Available at Asos.com
Buy It Now →Price verified as of June 9, 2026. WYS may earn a commission on purchases.
The WYS Verdict
The Dickies Fishersville Lightweight Coaches Jacket solves a specific, real problem: a breathable, on-trend summer outer layer for festival and warm-weather urban use at a price that does not require justification. The mesh lining separates it from cheaper alternatives, and the coaches silhouette is correctly proportioned rather than approximate. The poplin's tendency to crease and the break-in required for the snap buttons are genuine limitations, not minor footnotes, and the fit requires sizing down one to work as intended. At £75, it is the smart buy in the summer coaches jacket conversation for UK buyers who prioritise practicality alongside aesthetics, but buyers who want a premium, crease-resistant shell should spend the extra £55 on the Carhartt WIP instead.
Score: 7.8 out of 10
Buy it if you are heading into a festival season and need a breathable, credible outer layer at midrange price. Wait for an ASOS sale if you can: the jacket regularly appears in promotional windows and the discount makes the sizing gamble easier to absorb.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Dickies Fishersville worth £75?
For festival and warm-weather summer use, yes. The mesh lining delivers breathability that jackets at £35–£50 cannot match, and the Dickies construction holds up against much more expensive coaches jacket alternatives. It scores 7.8 out of 10 with caveats around creasing and snap-button stiffness, both of which are manageable rather than deal-breaking.
What size should I buy in the Dickies Fishersville?
Size down one from your usual UK size. The jacket runs consistently large, and the shoulder seam placement at your true size will sit too low for the silhouette to work as intended. If you are normally a UK 12, buy the UK 10; if you are petite and usually a UK 10–12, try the XS first.
Does the poplin shell hold up to being packed in a bag?
It creases. Owners consistently report that folding the Fishersville into a festival bag produces visible creasing that requires steaming to remove. The poplin weave is inherently prone to this, and no amount of gentle folding eliminates it entirely. If you need a packable jacket that recovers its shape from a rucksack, the Columbia Painted Peak Windbreaker is the better choice.
What is the best alternative to the Fishersville?
The Carhartt WIP OG Active Jacket at around £130 from ASOS or END Clothing. It offers better construction quality, a more consistent fit across sizes, and a shell that does not crease with packing. Choose it over the Fishersville if you want a coaches jacket that outlasts multiple seasons and can absorb harder wear; choose the Dickies if the £55 difference matters more than those factors.