Nike · Authentication
Dunk Low: real vs fake
The black-and-white Panda turned the Dunk Low into a mass phenomenon: huge print runs, constant restocks — and a parallel stream of replicas sold as “a regular store pair.” Born in 1985 as a college basketball shoe, the Dunk is checked through Swoosh proportions, tongue thickness and the fit of the silhouette.
What to check on the Dunk Low
Model-specific zones — on top of the brand-level signs.
Swoosh proportions
The authentic Swoosh tapers smoothly into a long, sharp tail with an even curve. On fakes the tail is often too thick or too short, and the bottom arc sags. Compare both shoes — the Swooshes should mirror each other exactly.
Tongue thickness and padding
A Dunk Low tongue is relatively thin and flat with moderate padding. Replicas tend toward an overly puffy tongue or a completely flat one; on the real pair the nylon logo tag is sewn dead center.
Toe box shape and height
The genuine Dunk toe sits low and slopes gently, keeping the silhouette close to the ground. An upturned or bloated toe is a typical mistake of factories copying the last.
NIKE heel embroidery
The “NIKE” heel embroidery is dense, with letters of equal height, even spacing and no loose threads. Crooked letters and sparse stitching are a common fake tell.
Panel layering and stitching
Dunk leather panels overlap in a strict order, with two straight parallel stitch rows at a consistent stitch length. Irregular stitch length and wavy rows expose a replica.
Photo angles for the check
- 1 Overall view
- 2 Logo
- 3 Interior tag
- 4 Outsole
- 5 Box label
Check your Dunk Low right now
First check is free. Snap photos of your item and get an AI verdict with a confidence score in about a minute.
FAQ
Are Panda Dunks faked more than other colorways?
Yes — the black-and-white Panda is the highest-volume and most-copied Dunk Low colorway. The checks stay the same: Swoosh proportions, tongue, heel embroidery. For mass colorways verification matters even more.
How does a Dunk Low differ from an SB Dunk when authenticating?
An SB Dunk has a noticeably thicker, densely padded tongue and a cushioned insole, while a regular Dunk Low has a thin tongue. If a pair sold as a regular Dunk shows a puffy tongue with no SB branding, treat it as a warning sign.
Can I spot a fake by the Swoosh alone?
One sign is never a verdict, but the Dunk Swoosh is very telling: factories struggle to reproduce the tail taper and curve precisely. It is safer to photograph both sides, the tongue and the heel — the combination of signals gives an accurate result.