Air Jordan 1 Low OG "Banned"
Retail: $145 | Style Code: IW6276-001
Release Date: May 2nd, 2026
Air Jordan 1 Retro Low OG "Banned"
The most famous fine in sneaker history gets its low-top moment. The Air Jordan 1 Retro Low OG "Banned" arrives in May 2026 as the continuation of a mythology that Jordan Brand has spent four decades making sure no one forgets — and the first time the red X that defined the 2011 high-top "Banned" release has made its debut on the low-cut silhouette. The story is the same. The shape has never been more wearable. And the insoles make sure you know exactly which date to remember.
The black tumbled leather upper pairs with Varsity Red across the toe box, Swoosh, heel overlay, and back tab in the Bred colorway that the NBA attempted to ban from hardwood floors on October 18, 1984 — the date printed directly on the insole alongside September 15th, the day Nike created the shoe, as a two-date timeline of how a uniform policy violation became the most powerful marketing story in sports footwear history. The red X on the heel tab returns from the 2011 high-top release in its low-top debut, tonal and deliberate, the mark of a ban worn as a badge. The woven Nike Air tongue tag replaces the Jumpman — the OG branding choice that connects this release to the original construction before any of the mythology had accumulated. Inner collar text reads "IMAGINE" on one side and "IF…?" on the other, a callback to the Air Jordan 1's 40th anniversary campaign and the question that the Banned story has always asked: imagine if the NBA had simply looked the other way. Three lace sets — red, black, and white — ship with the shoe and land in full family sizing at $145.
History has never been particularly interested in the technical details — that it was technically an Air Ship, not an Air Jordan 1, that the league banned that October day. Nike has never let that qualifier get in the way of a good story, and the story is good enough that the world has never asked it to. The "Banned" Low arrives with the red X, the date, and the conviction of a narrative that has been earning its keep since 1984. Some stories only get better with time. This one knows it.