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Jason Voorhees Costume in 2026: Where to Buy, and Why
Last updated June 5, 2026
Jason Voorhees stays a Halloween fixture because the look is pure silhouette: the hockey mask, dark work coveralls, and a machete tell the whole room Crystal Lake's killer has arrived.
The one real decision is the mask. Its design changes film to film (the Part 3 original, the Part 6 weathering, the Jason Goes to Hell flesh), so pick your film, then build from the neck down with plain dark coveralls and a machete. The mask carries the costume.
HalloweenCostumes.com
Price
ToTS mask $69.99; Amscan classic costume $39.99
Sizes
Mask one size; classic costume adult–Plus
Material
Officially licensed; Trick or Treat Studios molded-latex full-head mask; classic costume polyester shirt-jacket + EVA foam mask
HalloweenCostumes.com sells the authentic mask off the shelf — the licensed Trick or Treat Studios Jason Goes to Hell mask, $69.99, no made-to-order wait.
Per-film hockey masks ~$100; Roy Burns coveralls $185; prop weapons $80–$170
Sizes
Made to order
Material
Handmade screen-accurate per-film hockey masks, coveralls, and prop weapons
Hand-built and film-exact, HorrorFXDesigns is the buff's pick — per-film hockey masks ($100), Roy Burns coveralls ($185), prop machetes, made to order over 10–12 weeks.
The mask is where the costume lives, and HalloweenCostumes.com sells the authentic one off the shelf. Its licensed Trick or Treat Studios Jason Goes to Hell mask ($69.99) is molded latex covering the whole head, with the fused flesh-and-hockey-mask look from the ninth film. No custom order, no weeks-long wait.
For a budget one-cart build, the Amscan classic costume ($39.99) pairs a distressed shirt-and-jacket with a foam hockey mask. The Trick or Treat Studios mask is the accuracy step up.
Either way, add plain coveralls and a machete to finish.
For the screen-exact look, HorrorFXDesigns hand-makes Jason by film. The Texas shop has turned 5,479 sales over eight years at a five-star rating across 1,936 reviews, and buyers single out the film-accuracy and quality. One reports it’s the most movie-accurate costume they’ve found.
Pick your film: Part 3’s clean white hockey mask (~$100), Part 5’s Roy Burns coveralls ($185), Part 6’s machete and darts, on down the franchise.
The one trade-off is time. Everything is made to order on a 10–12 week lead, and the shop takes no cancellations, so order early in the season.
Trick or Treat Studios mask: one size, a full-head molded-latex pullover.
Amscan classic costume (HalloweenCostumes.com): adult sizes through Plus; a pullover shirt-and-jacket that layers over your own pants.
HorrorFXDesigns: made to order, so size at purchase against the shop’s measurements.
The coveralls: real workwear runs to standard sizing; buy for a layer underneath.
The body: real work coveralls
Jason’s coveralls are the one piece you shouldn’t buy as a costume. Plain dark green or navy work coveralls from a workwear brand cost about what a flimsy costume jumpsuit does and hold up far better.
Amazon is the place for them: Dickies, Red Kap, and similar workwear coveralls in dark green or navy, roughly $45–$65. The durable twill matches Jason’s on-screen workwear and outlasts any one-night costume.
We don’t anchor a verdict on Amazon, and the links earn us nothing. Use it for the canon body the costume shops don’t really sell.
Casual, not screen-accurate
Spirit’s “Jason 13” jersey, varsity jackets, and tees are fun fan merch, not the look Jason wears on screen. Grab one to rep the franchise, not to be him. (More on how we handle stylized merch in How we pick.)
Cross-links
Up to: Classic Slasher Villains — hub (forthcoming; coordinate Jason with the rest of the slashers)