Nobody buys the wrong style on purpose. They just don't know the question to ask.
Trunks and boxer briefs look nearly identical. Same waistband, same fabric, same general shape. The inseam is a different length, but how much can a few centimetres really matter? So men pick one based on whatever they've worn before and live with the results.
The results are trunks that ride up on wider thighs, boxer briefs that bunch under slim trousers, and a lot of adjusting in places you'd rather not. Both styles are good. The question isn't which one is better. It's which one is better for your body, your day, and what you're wearing over them.
The shortest answer: if your thighs touch when you walk, start with boxer briefs. The 9cm inseam grips below the widest part of the thigh and prevents ride-up and chafing. If they don't touch, trunks give you a cleaner line under fitted clothes with no penalty. Activity and heat push toward boxer briefs. Slim trousers and short shorts push toward trunks.
The centimetres that decide everything
A pair of Debriefs trunks has roughly a 5cm inseam. Our boxer briefs sit at around 9cm. Same waistband, same MicroModal fabric, same flatlock stitching throughout. The inseam is the only real variable between them.
But it's the variable that matters most.
A 5cm inseam ends high on the thigh, close to the widest part of it. A 9cm inseam carries past that point, landing where the thigh starts to narrow again. That distinction determines whether the hem has anything to grip during movement, or whether it spends the day migrating upward with nothing to stop it.
It also explains the chafing question. A longer inseam puts fabric between the inner thighs before they contact each other. Heat and moisture make skin friction significantly worse, which is why on any warm or active day, the coverage difference between 5cm and 9cm translates directly into comfort. Four centimetres is doing real work.
Start with your thighs
The most reliable signal for which style to buy is whether your thighs touch when you walk.
If they do, start with boxer briefs. The longer inseam sits below the widest part of the thigh, which means the leg band has somewhere to grip rather than being pushed upward with every step. And the extra length covers the inner thigh entirely, keeping skin from working against skin through the day.
If your thighs don't touch, you have genuine flexibility. Both styles will stay put without the ride-up problem, and the decision shifts to preference and activity.
But even with slimmer thighs, there are signals worth reading before you commit.
Activity matters. Anything involving extended walking, physical work, sport, or travel pushes toward boxer briefs. Movement amplifies every friction point that exists. An inseam that sits fine through eight hours at a desk can become distracting over five kilometres on foot.
Temperature matters. On a warm day, more skin surface in contact means more friction and more sweat. The 9cm inseam puts a barrier there that the 5cm doesn't. And because MicroModal wicks moisture away from the skin and dries fast, the extra fabric stays light and dry rather than getting heavy and clammy the way cotton inseams do in the heat.
Whether you adjust before lunch matters. If you've spent years doing the mid-meeting adjustment and assumed it was just how underwear works, it probably isn't. The most common cause is an inseam that's too short to stay put through normal movement. Boxer briefs typically fix that on the first wear without any other change.
What you're wearing over them
Underwear doesn't live in isolation. It has to work with whatever's above it.
Under slim-fit trousers or a fitted suit, trunks usually win. The shorter hem doesn't create a visible ridge through thin fabric, and there's nothing to bunch at the back of the knee when you sit. For men who spend most of their working day in tailored clothing, the trunk is the cleaner and quieter option.
Under jeans, chinos, or heavier casual trousers, neither style creates a visible line. The fabric above absorbs both hems. In those situations, you might as well optimise for comfort, and boxer briefs give you more thigh coverage without any visual downside.
Short casual shorts are where the geometry gets specific. If the shorts sit at or above the boxer brief hem, you've got visible leg fabric underneath, which looks wrong. Trunks sit cleanly within most short hems and stay invisible. If you spend your weekends in short athletic shorts or board shorts, trunks win on geometry alone.
The body-type shortcut
| Your build | Your legs | Start here |
|---|---|---|
| Slim | Thighs don't touch | Trunks |
| Average, moderately active | Thighs touch slightly when you walk | Boxer briefs most days, trunks under a suit |
| Muscular or athletic | Quads fill the leg of your jeans | Boxer briefs |
| Larger build | Thighs touch firmly | Boxer briefs, reliably |
One thing worth flagging for larger builds. Sizing up trunks to make the waist comfortable does not fix the thigh problem. You end up with a loose waistband and the same ride-up.
The fix is a longer inseam, not a bigger pair.
How each Debriefs style is built
The Debriefs trunks have a 5cm inseam, a contour pouch, and flatlock seams throughout. Designed to sit high and disappear under fitted clothes. The MicroModal keeps the fabric soft and light through 100+ washes, which is where cotton trunks eventually struggle. Cotton thins out through the seat and roughens across the inner thigh as the fibre breaks down.
These are the pair for desk days, fitted trousers, shorter casual shorts, and any situation where a clean silhouette matters.
The Debriefs boxer briefs have a 9cm inseam, the same contour pouch, and the same flatlock stitching. The longer leg covers the inner thigh fully. On warm or active days, the MicroModal wicks fast enough that the extra fabric stays dry and comfortable. Long cotton inseams get heavy and clammy with sweat.
If you want to understand what MicroModal does differently from cotton in fabric terms, the answer is moisture management. It pulls sweat off the skin and dries fast. Cotton holds it.
These are the pair for larger thighs, active days, travel, warm weather, and anyone who has been adjusting themselves before lunch for years.
The honest case for both
Not because you can't function in one style. You can. But trunks and boxer briefs solve different days, and a drawer that has both covered means you stop thinking about your underwear entirely. Which is the point.
The pattern from customers who try both styles is consistent. Cross-type buyers reorder at roughly three times the rate of single-style buyers. Within a week, the rotation is working without any conscious thought. Boxer briefs for long days, warm days, anything physical. Trunks for the office, fitted trousers, shorter shorts on weekends. The right pair is just the obvious one each morning.
And the second style is always an easier buy than the first. You already know the fabric. You already know the waistband. You're just testing a different inseam length, and the only thing at stake is four centimetres.
Start with boxer briefs if you want the lower-risk first pair. They suit more body types, more activity levels, and more clothing situations without giving anything up. Add trunks when you're ready, and see whether the shorter cut earns a regular place in the rotation.
For most men, it does. Just not every day.
Frequently Asked: Trunks vs Boxer Briefs
- What is the difference between trunks and boxer briefs?
- Inseam length. Trunks have roughly a 5cm inseam. Boxer briefs sit at around 9cm. Same fabric, same waistband, same construction otherwise in the Debriefs range. Those centimetres determine how the hem sits on your thigh, how much inner-thigh coverage you get, and whether the garment stays put through the day or rides up.
- Are boxer briefs better for thick thighs?
- Yes. The 9cm inseam reaches past the widest part of the thigh for most men, which gives the hem something to hold onto. The extra coverage also puts fabric between the inner thighs, reducing friction on longer or warmer days. If your thighs touch when you walk, boxer briefs are the more comfortable choice by a clear margin.
- Which style is better under slim-fit pants?
- Trunks, generally. The shorter hem creates less bulk under fitted or tailored fabric. If your trousers are thin or cut tight, the trunk's hem is less likely to show through or create a ridge where the leg seam ends.
- Which Debriefs style should I buy first?
- Boxer briefs, if you're unsure. They work for more body types and more situations than trunks do, and the longer inseam rarely causes a problem in the way a shorter one can. If you already know you prefer a shorter leg and you've worn that style without ride-up issues, start with trunks.
- Can I wear trunks if I have thick thighs?
- You can. But if your thighs touch and you're on your feet for any real stretch of the day, trunks may ride up. Sizing up doesn't fix this. A longer inseam does. Boxer briefs in the right size handle thicker thighs reliably, whereas trunks in a bigger size just give you a loose waistband and the same problem.
- Do trunks or boxer briefs affect fertility?
- There's research suggesting looser underwear may be associated with marginally better sperm measures than tighter styles. Experts generally describe the effect as modest and frame underwear as one minor variable alongside broader health and lifestyle factors. Worth knowing, not worth making a purchase decision around.



