Counterfeit sneakers dominate the global grey market, with sellers using vague, self-assigned quality tiers to market their goods. There is no official, standardized ranking system for these products, and mislabeling lower-quality pairs as higher tiers is extremely common. Below is the widely accepted informal tier structure used in the counterfeit shoe industry, ordered from lowest to highest quality.
Basic Grade
The lowest, most ubiquitous tier of counterfeit shoes, often called “one-look fakes” for how easy they are to spot. Produced in unregulated small workshops, these pairs only copy the general silhouette of the authentic design, using cheap recycled materials, low-grade PU, and shoddy craftsmanship. Visible flaws like crooked stitching, excess glue, and a total lack of the brand’s signature performance tech (such as cushioning or air soles) are standard. With less than 50% similarity to the authentic product, they are easy to identify even for casual observers, typically retail for $15–$30, fall apart quickly, and often have harsh chemical odors.
Mid Grade
A step up from basic fakes, this is the mass-market entry-level counterfeit tier. These pairs use upgraded molds to match the authentic shoe’s proportions, and include scannable fake tags and security labels. Materials are slightly improved, with some pairs using basic genuine leather, and craftsmanship has basic quality controls. They have 60–75% similarity to the real product: they look passable from a distance, but close inspection reveals clear gaps in material, finish, and in-shoe feel. Priced between $30–$50, they still lack the brand’s core performance features and lose their shape quickly with regular wear.
Premium Grade
The mid-range workhorse of the counterfeit market, and the most frequently mislabeled tier. These shoes are reverse-engineered from authentic pairs, with molds matched exactly to the original design. Materials are sourced to mirror the authentic product (like matching leather and non-toxic glue), with strict controls on stitching, glue application, and overall shape. Many even replicate basic cushioning technology. With 80–90% similarity to the real thing, they are indistinguishable to casual onlookers, and only experts can spot minor differences when compared side-by-side to an authentic pair. Typically priced $45–$75, this is the most popular option for personal wear.
Top-Tier Replica
The highest grade of counterfeit shoes, often marketed with niche factory code names like OG, LJR, or H12. These pairs are 1:1 reverse-engineered from authentic shoes, using the same source materials and original factory components (like branded cushioning units). Production and quality control standards are designed to match official brand factories, with full replication of tags, stamps, shoe boxes, and accessories. They reach 90–95% similarity to authentic pairs, and can even pass preliminary checks on some authentication platforms. Prices start at $70 and rise sharply for limited-edition styles. Critically, true top-tier replicas are extremely rare, and most sellers label lower-grade pairs as “top-tier” to inflate prices.
A final note: So-called “A/B grade” shoes are almost always misrepresented. Authentic “A grade” shoes are official factory-approved products, while “B grade” are factory-rejected defective pairs meant to be destroyed. Neither are counterfeit, and nearly all “A/B grade” shoes sold on the grey market are just mislabeled fakes.