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There's a difference between a clean sneaker and a considered one. The Air Jordan 6 'Bin 23' leans into that second lane, with details that feel placed, not added. The off-noir tone sets the base, but it's the finishing touches that give it that elevated feel.

Key Facts at a Glance

Detail Spec

Model

Air Jordan 6 Retro PRM 'Bin 23'

Colorway

Off-Noir/University Red-Off-Noir

Style Code

II6558-001

Release Date

February 14, 2026

Retail Price

$355

Pair Count

Limited to 2,300 pairs

Current Resale

~$399 StockX average

Where to Buy

StockX, GOAT, Flight Club

Where Can You Buy the Air Jordan 6 'Bin 23'?

For a 2,300-pair luxury drop, you'd expect resale to be brutal — but three months out, StockX has the 'Bin 23' averaging $399, only $44 over the $355 retail. That's the surprise here, and it makes the resale lane more reasonable than the raffle ever was. The shoe never hit big-box retail, so StockX, GOAT, and Flight Club are the realistic paths now.

Use the style code II6558-001 to filter for verified listings, and check whether the retro card and shoe trees are included — StockX flags that the Bin card may not come with every pair. The full kit matters on a luxury release like this.

What Makes This Retro Stand Out?

The wax seal on the heel is the piece that matters — it's the Bin signature, and pairing it with Off-Noir leather, a metallic lace lock, and wooden shoe trees in the box is Jordan Brand treating a 6 like a luxury good instead of a retro. The premium leather and suede upper sits well above standard GR quality, with University Red accents on the lace-stay triangle and contrast stitching.

A silver-tone metallic lace lock dresses up the basketball DNA, and the translucent outsole keeps the murdered-out base intact. The dust bag and updated retro card round out a kit that's exclusive to the 2026 Bin 23 line.

Why Does It Still Matter?

The Air Jordan 6 'Bin 23' marks the first time the silhouette has joined the premium Bin 23 collection, reviving a series that originally launched in 2010. The original run hit the AJ2, 5, 7, 9, and 13 — wax-sealed, individually numbered, and the first time Jordan Brand stepped into the luxury sneaker space.

This 6 is the reboot flagship, leading a 2026 run that pulls in the AJ3 and AJ8 next. The modest resale premium suggests demand is steady rather than frenzied — which is exactly the read Jordan Brand wanted before extending the series further.

Should You Buy the Air Jordan 6 'Bin 23' Now?

For collectors who want the most exclusive GR 6 of the modern era, the modest $44 resale premium makes the 'Bin 23' a reasonable buy — just verify the full kit (shoe trees, dust bag, retro card) is included. At $399, you're getting a 2,300-pair luxury Jordan without the punishing resale tax that usually comes with a run this small.

The catch is the baseline — it's still nearly $400 out the door, which is a real number for any sneaker. But if you've wanted to own a piece of the Bin 23 revival, this is the lead pair, and the price is as friendly as a 2,300-pair drop gets.

This article first appeared on Athlon Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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