Get 10% off Spends £100+
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Skateboarding retail, as a subculture and commercial industry, is one of those rare spaces where nostalgia meets performance wear, and where dropping £90 on a pair of trainers that can handle a nose slide and a Tesco run isn’t just accepted - it’s low-key expected. Supereight operates in this niche…Skateboarding retail, as a subculture and commercial industry, is one of those rare spaces where nostalgia meets performance wear, and…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Skateboarding retail, as a subculture and commercial industry, is one of those rare spaces where nostalgia meets performance wear, and where dropping £90 on a pair of trainers that can handle a nose slide and a Tesco run isn’t just accepted - it’s low-key expected. Supereight operates in this niche with the kind of steady, workmanlike focus that resists trend-chasing or influencer hype. If you know, you know. If you don’t, they’re not going to yell about it.
Supereight markets itself as a skate-focused, streetwear-literate retailer. Their range broadly covers footwear, clothing, accessories and skate hardware - essentially, if it rolls, laces, or snaps an ankle, they’ll stock it. Brands form a who's who of skate legitimacy: Vans, DC Shoes, Etnies, New Balance Numeric, and the mid-2000s memory-jogging likes of éS and Emerica. If you grew up watching VHS skate vids and now hold down a desk job, the selection here will feel both reassuring and vaguely accusatory.
Beyond hardgoods, there’s a clothing section that leans into both utility and lifestyle - think Thrasher tees, Dickies work trousers, and a couple of Deus Ex Machina pieces for when you want your hoodie to suggest an interest in motorcycles without actually owning one. Accessories round things out: practical backpacks, wallet upgrades, and the occasional book or niche magazine that’s surprisingly readable.
Supereight’s website isn’t going to wow any UX designers, but it works. You can find your way around, which is more than can be said for most online skate shops. Filters are functional (by brand, colour, even sustainability cred), sizes stay updated, and you’re unlikely to accidentally order a kid’s medium when you meant a men’s large - a real risk on some other sites we won't name.
The discounts are there if you look. Expect seasonal sales, along with the usual clearance section full of last-run sizes and colourways that didn’t quite chart on Instagram. Real ones know this is where the value lives: a pair of New Balance Numerics with the same build quality you'd get full price, now stealthily tagged at 30% off because you don’t mind cranberry suede. Shipping is reasonable, especially within the UK. Klarna and Clearpay are available if you want your fiscal responsibility staggered over four bites.
Supereight doesn’t overpromise. You won’t find mystery giveaways, branded drone drops or triple-collabs no one asked for. What you will find is a broad range, good sizing availability, and a retailer that seems content just... doing the thing. Which, in the current landscape of jammed-together marketplaces and algorithm-choked apps, is quietly refreshing.
That said, if you're hoping for brightly lit innovation or relentless newness, you’re in the wrong shop. A "new arrival" here might be an updated colourway of a shoe you wore in sixth form - which, depending on how you look at it, is either the perfect vibe or the retail equivalent of déjà vu.
If you’re scouting for an offer, the sale section usually holds its own - especially for shoes. There’s routinely 15–40% off across names like Vans, adidas Skateboarding, and éS. Occasionally, collab drops sneak under MSRP if they’ve been slept on. No need to stalk drop dates or sign up for notifications though, unless that’s your idea of fun.
Conclusion? Supereight is what happens when a small skate shop quietly scales without selling out. The energy is less "hypebeast drop-day chaos" and more "your local skateshop got a decent web dev budget." If you want to pick up your next pair of Half Cabs without sorting through 200 AI-generated shoe names, it’s a solid place to stop by - and maybe even linger.
Last updated:
⭐ Rating: 3.7 / 5 (52 votes)