








Unissued German Navy Deck Pants
History and Origin
The Deutsche Marine, Germany's federal navy, traces its modern form to 1956 when West Germany joined NATO and established the Bundesmarine. Following reunification in 1990, the East German Volksmarine was absorbed into the force, and by 1995 the service was officially renamed the Deutsche Marine. Today it is a permanent participant in all four NATO Maritime Groups, with active roles in anti-piracy and maritime security operations.
Working the deck of a naval vessel is hard on clothing. Sailors face fuel exposure, machinery heat, fire risk, and constant physical stress, and navies around the world have engineered their working uniforms to match. The Deutsche Marine's answer was a 65/35 viscose and aramid blend. Aramid fiber, the same class of material used in Nomex flight suits and heat-resistant industrial workwear, is inherently flame-resistant and significantly tougher under abrasion than standard cotton. These are not dress trousers. They were built to keep sailors safe in a demanding environment, and that construction carries over to whoever wears them next. Most of the stock in circulation today dates from the 2000s and 2010s.
Construction
Cut from a midweight 65% viscose, 35% aramid blend in standard Deutsche Marine navy blue (dark enough to read nearly black in low light), these pants fasten with a zip fly and a button closure at the waist. Wide 4 cm belt loops accept a standard work or duty belt without bunching. Two flap-close leg cargo pockets give you real carry capacity, and a rear button pocket rounds out the storage. The fit is a straight military cut with moderate room through the thigh.
At Work
The viscose component gives the blend a softer, slightly stretchy hand that makes these more comfortable for extended wear than the construction specs suggest. AP customers have worn them on construction sites and in the garage, and the fabric holds up.
The cargo pockets are genuinely large. For pants with legitimate flame-resistant construction, the price-to-performance ratio here is hard to match in the civilian market. Comparable FR workwear trousers from industrial brands typically run three to four times the cost.
The Short and Sweet
- Genuine Deutsche Marine surplus
- Unissued condition
- 65/35 viscose/aramid blend, midweight
- Dark navy blue
- Flap-close leg cargo pockets
- Rear button pocket
- Zip-up fly with button waist
- Wide 4 cm belt loops
Original: $504.00
-70%$504.00
$151.20Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
History and Origin
The Deutsche Marine, Germany's federal navy, traces its modern form to 1956 when West Germany joined NATO and established the Bundesmarine. Following reunification in 1990, the East German Volksmarine was absorbed into the force, and by 1995 the service was officially renamed the Deutsche Marine. Today it is a permanent participant in all four NATO Maritime Groups, with active roles in anti-piracy and maritime security operations.
Working the deck of a naval vessel is hard on clothing. Sailors face fuel exposure, machinery heat, fire risk, and constant physical stress, and navies around the world have engineered their working uniforms to match. The Deutsche Marine's answer was a 65/35 viscose and aramid blend. Aramid fiber, the same class of material used in Nomex flight suits and heat-resistant industrial workwear, is inherently flame-resistant and significantly tougher under abrasion than standard cotton. These are not dress trousers. They were built to keep sailors safe in a demanding environment, and that construction carries over to whoever wears them next. Most of the stock in circulation today dates from the 2000s and 2010s.
Construction
Cut from a midweight 65% viscose, 35% aramid blend in standard Deutsche Marine navy blue (dark enough to read nearly black in low light), these pants fasten with a zip fly and a button closure at the waist. Wide 4 cm belt loops accept a standard work or duty belt without bunching. Two flap-close leg cargo pockets give you real carry capacity, and a rear button pocket rounds out the storage. The fit is a straight military cut with moderate room through the thigh.
At Work
The viscose component gives the blend a softer, slightly stretchy hand that makes these more comfortable for extended wear than the construction specs suggest. AP customers have worn them on construction sites and in the garage, and the fabric holds up.
The cargo pockets are genuinely large. For pants with legitimate flame-resistant construction, the price-to-performance ratio here is hard to match in the civilian market. Comparable FR workwear trousers from industrial brands typically run three to four times the cost.
The Short and Sweet
- Genuine Deutsche Marine surplus
- Unissued condition
- 65/35 viscose/aramid blend, midweight
- Dark navy blue
- Flap-close leg cargo pockets
- Rear button pocket
- Zip-up fly with button waist
- Wide 4 cm belt loops




















