Women's Health

Crz Yoga Workout Clothes, Ranked: What's Actually Worth Buying (According to a Style Writer)

The label’s most popular workout clothes, ranked.

By Elliot O·Apr 27, 2026·2 min read
Crz Yoga Workout Clothes, Ranked: What's Actually Worth Buying (According to a Style Writer)

Reported by Women's Health Magazine.

The Crz Yoga Edit: What Actually Delivers

Budget activewear has a reputation problem. Either it falls apart after three washes, rides up during squats, or feels like you're wearing a synthetic garbage bag. Crz Yoga breaks that curse. According to Women's Health Magazine, the brand's bestselling Butterluxe collection—an 81% nylon, 19% elastane blend—delivers that buttery, second-skin softness usually reserved for $200 leggings. The no-front-seam construction on their latest Butterluxe legging is a game changer: no bunching, no camel toe battles, just smooth geometry that actually flatters. Pair it with the matching Butterluxe tank (double-lined, so lighter colors don't betray your bra situation) and you've got a cohesive set that looks intentional without demanding a second mortgage.

The Unexpected Heroes

Where Crz Yoga really shines is in the pieces that don't scream "activewear." The Pima cotton cropped tank is breezier than typical gym wear—loose enough to move with you, structured enough not to cling, and it actually survives repeated washing without pilling. The Secretsculpt biker shorts use a slightly more compressive fabric blend than the Butterluxe line, plus a strategic V-seam at the back that's designed to sculpt. For layering, the cotton-fleece jogger walks the line between loungewear legitimacy and gym-ready functionality; the pockets are actually deep enough for a phone. And the Softembrace t-shirt transcends athletic wear entirely—it's the kind of premium-feeling basic that works with everything from jeans to linen.

There's also an argument to be made for not overthinking basics. The Softhold three-pack thong is 100% cotton where it counts, with minimal elastane elsewhere, keeping things breathable without the price tag of premium lingerie brands. The Strappy Longline Sports Bra delivers enough support for most cup sizes while looking intentional enough to wear solo, with criss-cross straps that feel less "gym" and more "actually styled."

What ties this collection together isn't innovation—it's consistency. The fabrics across the line feel considered. The cuts work for actual bodies moving through actual workouts. Nothing demands constant adjusting or apologizing. For the price point, that's genuinely rare, and it's why these pieces earn rotation, not just shelf space.

Good activewear shouldn't require choosing between comfort, durability, and not looking like you're dressed for a spin class you're not attending.


Read the original at Women's Health Magazine.

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Women's HealthWomen's Health MagazineHealth & Fitness

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