You opened Myntra at 11pm 'just to look,' scrolled through 84 listings of black wayfarers, and closed the tab without buying anything. Sound familiar? Sunglass shopping has become decision-paralysis-by-design — same shape, same colour, same vague brand name, ₹400 to ₹14,000.
Myntra's Sunglasses and Eyewear Sale 2026 is running through July with up to 30% off on Ray-Ban, Vogue, Tommy Hilfiger, and 60%+ off house brands like Roadster, Mast & Harbour, and Carlton London. We spent a week filtering the bestseller lists, comparing real customer reviews against editorial photos, and pulled the 13 pairs below — across face shapes, budgets, and use cases. Stack a Zoutons Myntra coupon on top of the sale price for the cleanest deal.
"Still the only pair I reach for when I want something that looks expensive without trying."
Ray-Ban's RB3025 is the original aviator silhouette — teardrop G-15 crystal lenses, double-bridge metal frame, sleek nose pads, and that unmistakable embossed Ray-Ban etching on the left lens. On Myntra it's typically the highest-priced sunglass in the men's bestseller list, but the sale pricing brings it into 'splurge but justify' territory. The frame is forgiving across face shapes and the green-tinted G-15 lenses cut glare on highway drives.
"If you want the aviator look without spending Ray-Ban money, Fastrack's M165 is the workhorse."
Fastrack's M165 series has been a sub-₹1,500 staple for years and the reason is simple — the metal frame is sturdier than most sunglasses at this price, the matte-black finish doesn't peel after a monsoon, and the lenses pass real UV400. On the Myntra sale it routinely drops under ₹900, which is genuinely hard to argue with for a daily-driver pair.
"Brown lens + gold frame is the safest 'I dressed up' move that still works with kurta or shirt-trouser."
Carlton London's aviator borrows the Ray-Ban silhouette but ships with brown gradient lenses that look noticeably more flattering in photographs than mirrored or jet-black versions. The frame is slightly slimmer and lighter than the Ray-Ban, which makes it sit better on smaller faces. Build quality is what you'd expect from Myntra's mid-tier private label — not heirloom, but a solid two-season pair.
"The most-reviewed polarized wayfarer in this price band — and the reviews are right."
Vincent Chase is Lenskart's in-house brand and the polarized wayfarer is its single most-rated product on Myntra. Polarization at this price (~₹1,200) is the killer feature — you'll notice the difference on a sunny Mumbai afternoon or a long Pune-Lonavala drive. The acetate frame has a hint of flex, which makes it more forgiving if you sit on it (we don't recommend testing this).
"When you want the photo to do the work for you, cat-eyes carry their weight."
Vogue Eyewear sits in the Luxottica group — same parent as Ray-Ban — which means the hinge and frame construction is genuinely premium for the price tier. This cat-eye design swings between Audrey Hepburn-formal and Bandra-brunch casual depending on your outfit. The tapered tip is slimmer than most fast-fashion cat-eyes, so it doesn't dominate the face.
"Square frames flatter round and oval faces — and Tommy's version doesn't shout the logo."
Tommy Hilfiger's square frame is the kind of pair you can wear to a client meeting and a beach holiday without anyone questioning either. The acetate is thicker than the Vincent Chase, which gives it a more 'designer' weight on the bridge. The temple carries a small enamel TH flag — visible if you look for it, invisible from across a room.
"Round metal frames are having a moment again — and Mast & Harbour nails the price/look ratio."
Mast & Harbour is Myntra's in-house basics label and the round-metal sunglass is its highest-volume eyewear SKU. The frame is thin gold-tone metal with brown gradient lenses, the kind of pair that looks borrowed from a vintage shop. At under ₹600 on sale it's a 'why not have two pairs' purchase.
"Polaroid invented polarized eyewear. Their PLD line is the cheapest way to own real polarization."
Polaroid's own polarized tech is genuinely better than the off-brand TAC polarized lenses you see at this price. The PLD series uses lightweight TR-90 frames — flexible, near-indestructible, and only 18g on the nose. It's the pair I keep in the car for road trips because it survives glove-compartment abuse.
"When the brief is 'cheap pair I won't cry over if I lose it', Roadster's wayfarer is the answer."
Roadster is Myntra's own value label and the black wayfarer is the highest-selling sub-₹500 sunglass on the platform. The plastic frame is honest — it doesn't pretend to be acetate — but the lenses are UV400 certified and the hinge survived a six-month durability test in our editorial review last summer.
"The hexagonal tip is the small detail that makes this look more expensive than it is."
French Connection's cat-eye sits in the middle of the eyewear market — under Vogue, above Mast & Harbour — and the FC7491 is the model that's been in the bestseller list for three months straight. The frame is acetate, not plastic, which makes a real difference at the temples and bridge. Reviewers consistently say it photographs better than it looks in the box.
"If Ray-Ban is too on-the-nose and Fastrack feels too budget, John Jacobs hits the middle perfectly."
John Jacobs is Lenskart's premium house label — same factories that build for European designer brands, sold direct without the markup. The aviator uses titanium-mix metal so it's lighter than the Ray-Ban while feeling more substantial than the Carlton London. Polarized lenses, real anti-reflective coating, and the case alone feels like ₹500 of the price.
"Most sunglasses at this price are black-on-black. Benetton's coloured frames are the pop."
Benetton's eyewear line leans into its heritage — bright, saturated frames in colours nobody else stocks (mint green, coral red, periwinkle blue). The frame is acetate, the lenses are tinted to match. If your wardrobe is mostly neutral and you want one piece of summer colour, this is the lowest-effort way to add it.
"Hidesign's craftsmanship is what makes this feel three price tiers above what it costs."
Hidesign is best known for leather goods and the eyewear line carries the same workshop-grade feel. The square frame is heavier acetate than fashion brands typically use, the hinge is metal-on-metal (most fashion sunglasses use plastic-on-metal which loosens), and the temple tip is wrapped in real leather. It's the pair that survives airport security trays without cracking.
| Product | Sale Price | Lens / Frame | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ray-Ban Aviator Classic RB3025 Gold-Tone Sunglasses | ₹9170 | 58mm lens width, 14mm bridge, 135mm temple | Heirloom aviator buyers |
| Fastrack Black Aviator Sunglasses for Men M165BK1 | ₹899 | Polycarbonate lens, UV400 protection certified | Daily driver under ₹1k |
| Carlton London Brown Lens Aviator Sunglasses | ₹1199 | Brown gradient lens, UV400 + anti-glare coating | Photogenic aviator look |
| Vincent Chase Polarized Black Wayfarer Sunglasses | ₹1199 | TAC polarized lens, UV400 + scratch resistant | Highway driving + glare |
| Vogue Eyewear Cat Eye Sunglasses for Women | ₹3990 | Plastic frame, gradient tinted lens | Brunch / event styling |
| Tommy Hilfiger Square Sunglasses for Men | ₹4790 | Acetate frame, polycarbonate gradient lens | Office-to-weekend pair |
| Mast & Harbour Round Brown Sunglasses Unisex | ₹549 | Metal frame, polycarbonate gradient lens | Vintage round look on a budget |
| Polaroid Unisex Polarized Sunglasses PLD Series | ₹1799 | Polaroid UltraSight polarized lens, 99.9% glare reduction | Travel + sport |
| Roadster Black Wayfarer Sunglasses for Men | ₹449 | Plastic frame, polycarbonate lens | Loss-proof everyday pair |
| French Connection Cat Eye Sunglasses FC7491 | ₹1499 | Acetate frame, gradient tinted lens | Mid-tier cat-eye |
| John Jacobs Aviator Polarized Sunglasses | ₹2999 | Titanium-mix metal frame, 26g weight | Premium without designer markup |
| United Colors of Benetton Sunglasses Unisex | ₹1099 | Cellulose acetate frame, multiple colour options | Colour-pop accessory |
| Hidesign Square Frame Sunglasses for Men | ₹2299 | Heavy acetate frame, leather-wrapped temple tips | Long-haul travel pair |
The single highest-impact rule: pick a frame shape opposite to your face shape. Round face → square or rectangular frames. Square face → round or aviator frames. Heart-shaped face → cat-eye or aviator. Oval face → you can wear almost anything, lucky you.
Frame width should match the widest part of your face — the temple tips shouldn't poke past the side of your head, and the bridge shouldn't squeeze the nose. If you're shopping online, Myntra lists the lens width (in mm) on every product page; men's average is 54-58mm, women's is 50-54mm. Use that as your starting point and adjust by ±2mm based on previous pairs that worked.
Every sunglass on this list is UV400 protected — that's the bare minimum and it blocks 99.9% of UVA and UVB rays. Polarization is a separate filter that cuts glare from horizontal surfaces (roads, water, glass, snow). If you drive a lot or spend time outdoors, polarization is genuinely worth the price bump (₹500-1,500 in this sale). If you only wear sunglasses for fashion or short walks, UV400-only is fine.
01
⭐ Best Overall
02
💰 Budget Pick
03
✏️ Editor's Pick
04
🌟 Top Rated
05
💎 Statement Frame
06
💼 Premium Pick
07
🎨 Trend Pick
08
🏞️ Best for Travel
09
💰 Under ₹500
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✏️ Editor's Pick
11
💼 Premium Aviator
12
🎨 Colour Pop
13
🧳 Travel-Ready