The state trooper hat is one of the most recognizable pieces of American law-enforcement uniform. That wide, flat brim. The high, four-pinch crown. The leather chin strap that rides just under the lip. You see it from two blocks away, and you know β that's a trooper.
It isn't just decoration. The hat carries history, regulation, and a working purpose. Most state police agencies still require it on uniformed patrol, traffic stops, ceremonies, and court appearances. Drop the hat, and you drop a layer of authority that took the agency a century to build.
This guide walks through everything candidates and curious readers ask about the trooper hat: the exact name, the classic Stetson story, state-by-state variations, why some troopers tilt it, and what the rules actually say about wearing it. If you're prepping for a state police hiring board, knowing this stuff also helps β recruiters love candidates who already understand the uniform culture.
The proper name is the campaign hat. Some call it a Montana Peak, some call it a "smokey" β that one comes from Smokey Bear, who wears the same style. Inside trooper culture, you'll hear it called a "lid," a "cover," or simply "the hat." All correct. All the same piece of gear.
The signature shape is a stiff, flat brim sitting horizontal to the ground, with a tall crown pinched at four corners β that's the Montana Peak or Montana Pinch. Drill instructors at boot camp wear the same hat. So do Royal Canadian Mounted Police. So do U.S. Park Rangers. The look is intentional: tall, sharp, all-business.
John B. Stetson built his hat company in Philadelphia in 1865. His "Boss of the Plains" was made for cowboys, but the wide brim and durability made it perfect for outdoor police work too. State police agencies adopted the campaign style in the early 1900s, and Stetson became the default supplier. Today the brand is still common β but agencies also buy from Akubra, Bailey, and Major as long as the spec matches. So every trooper hat is a "campaign hat," but not every campaign hat is a real Stetson.
Campaign hat β the official term used in uniform manuals.
Stetson β the brand most often associated with the style; sometimes used as a generic term.
Smokey / Smokey Bear hat β slang, after the wildfire-prevention mascot.
Montana Peak β the four-pinch crown shape.
The campaign hat earned its name in the U.S. military during the Spanish-American War. Soldiers needed a wide-brim hat that shed rain and shaded the eyes β a "campaign" hat for field campaigns. The Army formalized it in 1911, with the four-corner Montana Peak crease.
State police agencies, which were largely formed in the same era, borrowed the look. Pennsylvania created the first modern state police force in 1905. New York followed in 1917. Massachusetts in 1921. By the late 1920s, the campaign hat was the standard. It signaled discipline. It signaled the military lineage these agencies wanted to project.
That look has barely changed in 100 years. Some agencies tweaked the band color, added a state seal, or shifted from felt to a straw summer version. The silhouette stayed identical. That continuity is part of why the hat reads as authority β it's one of the few uniform pieces in modern law enforcement that hasn't been redesigned every decade.
There were a few moments when agencies experimented. In the 1980s and 1990s, several state forces tested baseball-style caps for "modern" patrol looks. Highway Patrol units in two or three states even dropped the campaign hat for a brief stretch. It didn't stick. By the early 2000s, every one of those agencies had quietly brought the campaign hat back. The public response β and the troopers' own pride β pushed the return. Some senior commanders, asked about it later, said the same thing: when you take the hat away, you take part of the trooper identity with it.
The tall top section, pinched into four corners (Montana Peak). Usually 4 to 5 inches high.
Flat and stiff, typically 3.5 to 4 inches wide. Holds its shape in rain β that's the design.
A ribbon or leather strip around the base of the crown. Color often signals rank.
Leather strap worn under the lower lip β not under the chin. Keeps the hat secure on windy traffic stops.
Inside leather sweatband and silk or cotton liner. Where the trooper's name is often written.
Some states add a small metal badge or state seal to the front of the crown.
Most state police agencies issue two versions of the campaign hat. The winter version is felt β usually wool or fur felt β in dark colors like navy, black, gray, or olive depending on the agency. The summer version is straw, woven from milan or rush, lighter on the head, and shaped to the same dimensions.
The switchover dates are written into uniform regs. New York State Police, for example, traditionally switches between felt and straw on set dates each spring and fall. Pennsylvania, Michigan, and many other agencies follow similar calendar rules. Wear the wrong one outside the window and you'll get a quiet word from a sergeant.
The first hat is almost always issued at the academy. Replacement hats are usually a mix: the agency provides a uniform allowance, and the trooper picks up the difference. Quality matters. A cheap campaign hat sags after one rainy shift. A real Stetson holds shape for years.
The New York state trooper hat is a dark gray felt campaign hat with a thin black band and the state seal on the front. NY troopers are famous for their sharp uniform presentation, and the hat is part of why. Straw version is worn from spring through fall.
PA state trooper hat is gray-black felt with a black band. Pennsylvania was the original modern state police force, and the agency keeps tight rules on hat wear β including the chin strap position. The straw summer hat is also gray.
Texas DPS troopers don't wear a campaign hat β they wear a true western Stetson cowboy hat. Cattleman's crease, curled brim, tan or white. It's a state identity choice. The Texas Highway Patrol hat is iconic in its own way.
Florida Highway Patrol uses a tan campaign hat with the state seal. Straw is common for most of the year given the climate. The combination of tan uniform plus the hat is distinctive.
Alaska State Troopers issue a fur trooper hat β yes, real fur β for winter wear. It's a Russian-style ushanka design rather than a campaign hat, suited for sub-zero patrols. Summer wear reverts to the standard campaign style.
Three reasons, in order of how often they're cited inside academies.
1. Authority and identity. The campaign hat is unique to state police and a few federal agencies. It separates troopers from city police, sheriffs, and security guards at a glance. On a dark highway shoulder, the silhouette matters β drivers recognize a trooper from inside their car.
2. Function. Wide brim sheds rain off the face and away from the eyes. Shades the sun during traffic enforcement. Protects the back of the neck. Keeps water from running down the collar onto the body armor. Old design, but it works.
3. Discipline and tradition. Putting the hat on is a small ritual. It says the trooper is on duty, in public, and representing the agency. Agencies that ditched the campaign hat for ball caps in the 1990s mostly brought it back, because it changed how the public read their officers.
Mostly yes. Uniform regulations at most state agencies require the campaign hat any time the trooper is out of the vehicle in uniform β traffic stops, foot patrol, court appearances, public events. Inside the cruiser, the hat usually rides on the passenger seat or hangs on a hook behind the driver. There are exceptions: tactical situations, K-9 work, motorcycle units, and certain plainclothes assignments. But for road troopers, the hat goes on with the boots.
Look at photos of state troopers and you'll see something consistent β the hat sits low and slightly forward, often down to the eyebrows. There's a reason. The forward tilt:
Some academies actually teach the tilt as part of the dress standard. The hat should sit roughly two finger-widths above the eyebrows in front, with the brim cutting a clean horizontal line. New troopers spend weeks getting it right.
The hat is one piece. Agencies tend to keep the rest of the look just as tight. Hair is short on the sides and back, flat or low fade on top. Mustaches are allowed at most state agencies, though they must be neatly trimmed and not extend past the corner of the mouth. Beards are usually prohibited except for medical or religious accommodation. The total package β hat, hair, mustache, uniform, boots β is meant to read as squared away from across a parking lot.
Real issued trooper hats are not sold to the public. Agencies treat them as restricted uniform items, and the cap badge or hat band can be considered restricted insignia. That said, you can buy a generic Stetson Campaign style β same shape, no agency insignia β from Stetson, Major Uniform, or specialty retailers. Expect to pay $200 to $400 for a felt version and around $150 for the straw summer version.
Collectors look for vintage agency-marked hats, but selling or buying one with the original badge intact can be a legal gray zone in some states because of impersonation laws. The safest collectible is a hat with the agency insignia removed. If you collect police memorabilia and you're uncertain whether a hat is legal to own in your state, contact the state agency directly β most have a public information officer who can clarify the rules in writing.
Campaign hats are sold in standard hat sizes (6 7/8 through 7 5/8 covers most adults). Fit should be snug but not tight β tight hats cause headaches on long shifts. A proper hat sits flat on the head, not pinching the temples, with the brim level. Most retailers will steam-fit the hat to your head shape. Long-shift troopers often request a slightly larger size than their measured head, because the felt softens over time and a too-tight hat becomes unwearable by hour eight.
Texas is the outlier. The Texas DPS issues a true western Stetson cowboy hat β cattleman's crease, curled brim, tan or white felt β not a campaign hat. The design pays tribute to the Texas Rangers, who have worn similar hats since the late 1800s.
Texas troopers are arguably the only state police force in the country whose hat reads more "ranger" than "trooper." The Texas state trooper hat is iconic in its own right and shows up in films, country music videos, and tourist photos across the state. The shape is different from a New York or Pennsylvania campaign hat, but the cultural function is the same: instant identification of state police authority.
If you're reading this because you're thinking about applying to a state police agency, here's the practical takeaway. The hat β and everything around it β signals what your day-to-day uniform life will look like. Pressed shirts. Polished boots. Inspection-ready cover. Some applicants love that culture. Others realize it isn't for them. Better to know now.
Academy training will cover uniform wear in detail in week one. You'll be issued a campaign hat, taught the chin strap rule, and inspected daily. Showing up already familiar with the gear β knowing the difference between felt and straw, knowing where the strap goes β is the kind of small thing that makes a good first impression on the drill instructors.
The written exam, of course, is the bigger hurdle. Most state police hiring tests cover reading comprehension, grammar, reasoning, situational judgment, and basic math. The state trooper exam 2026 study materials walk through every section, and the linked complete study guide goes deeper on the topics agencies test most often. Combined with the career and salary guide, you'll have a clear picture of what the job pays, what it asks, and what the path looks like.
Recruiters hear the same hat questions over and over from applicants. Yes, you do have to wear it on patrol. Yes, the chin strap really does sit under the lip. No, you can't customize the band β the agency dictates the spec. Yes, female troopers wear the same campaign hat as male troopers; there is no gender-specific version at any state agency. And yes, turbans and other religious headwear have been accommodated by a growing number of agencies, with the cap badge transferred onto the religious head covering.
Another common question β does the hat come off when you're running? Yes. Foot pursuits, fight situations, and any emergency where the hat would be a liability are clear exceptions. Most troopers wear a thin elastic cord under the crown to keep the hat secure during quick movements, but in a real chase the hat goes on the cruiser seat and stays there until the situation is back under control.
Inside agency uniform manuals there are specific rules about when the hat is worn and when it isn't. Standard practice across most state police agencies looks like this: hat on when out of the cruiser in public; hat off when entering a private residence, a courtroom (unless testifying in formal uniform), a place of worship, or any indoor setting outside the agency's own buildings.
In the cruiser, hat off and placed crown-up on the passenger seat or in a hat rack behind the headrest. At funerals and memorials, the hat is held in the left hand against the chest during prayers, then placed back on for the salute.
These details get drilled into recruits at the academy and become second nature within a few months on the road. Veteran troopers can shift from hat-on patrol stance to hat-off interview stance without thinking about it β the muscle memory is that strong.
The state trooper hat is more than a hat. It's a 100-year piece of American police uniform that signals authority, discipline, and tradition the second a driver spots it in the rearview mirror. The shape is the Montana Peak campaign style. The brand is most often Stetson. The chin strap sits under the lip. The brim is flat. The tilt is forward. And under the felt, a trooper who knows their uniform and their job.
For candidates working toward a state police badge, the hat is the final reward of academy graduation. By then, you'll have earned every inch of it.