The Cotton Loop Terry Polo is Buck Mason doing what Buck Mason does best: taking a familiar silhouette and making it quiet enough to actually live in.
The Verdict
At $138, this is a reasonable buy for a polo that travels well and stays out of its own way. The 33% nylon content is an honest trade-off: it adds resilience and reduces wrinkling, but it also pulls the fabric slightly away from the pure cotton hand-feel the name implies.
The Make
The fabric is a cotton/nylon reverse jersey in a fine high-gauge knit. "Loop terry" here refers to the texture rather than the weight — this reads closer to a polished performance knit than the loopback fleece the name might conjure. At 67% cotton, it breathes reasonably well, though the nylon fraction keeps it from the softness-first feel of an all-cotton pique.
Construction details are considered rather than flashy. The open collar uses a ribbed finish, the placket is self-yarn (no contrasting tape to cheapen the look), and the back shoulder is cut with an angled seam that Buck Mason says improves mobility. Rib cuffs and waistband, a single chest pocket. Nothing unexpected, nothing missing. Country of origin is listed as imported, which is standard across the brand's knitwear line — notable only because Buck Mason acquired Mohnton Knitting Mills in Pennsylvania in 2023, and it's worth watching whether domestic production migrates to this category over time.
The Fit
The cut is regular, and sizing is true. If you're between sizes, stay where you are. The silhouette has enough ease through the chest and shoulders to layer a light crewneck underneath without pulling, which explains the high layering score — and which makes this more useful in spring and fall than a slim-cut polo would be. XS through XXL is a solid range.
The Context
The Cotton Loop Terry Polo sits in a category with real competition. Sunspel's cotton polo comes in around the same price with a longer heritage in fine-gauge knitwear and a cleaner country-of-origin story. Inis Meain makes knit polos at higher price points with more considered fabric sourcing. What Buck Mason offers here is practicality: it packs flat, doesn't wrinkle badly, and the subdued construction means it reads well across contexts, from a weekend errand to a smart-casual dinner where you're underdressed on purpose. The 9 out of 10 travel score is the most useful signal in the data.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The construction notes are solid and the travel case is genuinely strong, but the nylon content at this price point gives me pause. Sunspel's pique polo is similarly priced and made in England. That's the comparison I'd make before clicking purchase.



