Halloween Costume Guide
Three distinct looks, one character — this guide covers every version so you can pick the one that fits your crowd and your budget.
Wanda Maximoff, played by Elizabeth Olsen, goes from Avenger to full chaos-magic threat across WandaVision and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, and each phase of the character comes with a visually distinct costume. The MCU Wiki has the full breakdown of each uniform if you want to get precise. Recognition is broad for the Scarlet Witch look specifically; the WandaVision Halloween episode version is more niche.
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The headpiece is what the costume reads as from ten feet away. Get it right and the rest follows; get it slightly wrong, and the whole costume becomes “woman in red.” The version of the headpiece matters too: the WandaVision Halloween episode tiara is brighter and more theatrical, while the Multiverse of Madness tiara is darker and more angular. Mixing the wrong headpiece with the wrong costume version is the most common way this look falls apart at a party, and it is not obvious until you are standing in front of someone who knows the films.
In WandaVision, Wanda looks directly into the camera during a talking-head segment, pauses, and says “I don’t need you to tell me who I am” with absolute calm. No anger, no tears. Just complete certainty from someone who has lost everything and rebuilt herself anyway. That stillness is the character. It plays better at a party than trying to do the chaos magic hands.
Order the contact lenses at least two weeks early
Colored cosmetic contacts from specialty retailers have longer shipping windows than standard Amazon orders. If you order them the week before Halloween and they arrive late or do not fit, you have no backup plan. The red lenses are the highest-impact single detail for the Multiverse of Madness version, so they are worth the lead time.
The cape gets caught on everything
At a crowded indoor party, a long flowing cape will be stepped on, caught on door handles, and pulled sideways approximately every fifteen minutes. The WandaVision version of the costume is more accurate with it, but the Scarlet Witch coat version is significantly easier to navigate in a crowd. If the party is outdoors or in a large space, the cape works. For a tight venue, decide in advance whether you are keeping it or leaving it at the door.
Couples Idea
Excellent couple pairing. Vision’s grey-and-yellow android look creates immediate visual contrast with any version of Wanda’s red costume. Anyone who watched WandaVision will recognize it without a word. Anyone who did not will still understand the general superhero couple dynamic.
Duo Idea
Strong duo for WandaVision viewers. The witch-versus-witch tension between the two characters is the central conflict of the show, and the visual contrast between Wanda’s red and Agatha’s purple is sharp. At a party full of casual MCU fans, this lands immediately.
Group Idea: WandaVision Cast
Excellent group for a WandaVision-themed party. All five characters have visually distinct costumes and the group is immediately readable to anyone who watched the show. The weak link is commitment: a half-assembled Vision or a Pietro without the silver wig turns a clear group concept into a loose collection.
Group Idea: Iconic Marvel Superheroines
Strong group if everyone has a distinct, recognizable look. Five different color palettes and five different silhouettes mean this group reads clearly at a glance. The only risk is the group getting split up at the party, which turns five individual costumes into five individual people explaining their costume separately all night.
Across all three versions, the anchor piece for each look is the one thing that is not easily substituted. Everything else has a reasonable alternative in most people’s wardrobes.
Wanda is not a loud character. The most powerful moment in her arc is when she is completely still. That plays surprisingly well at a crowded party if you commit to it.
Choose a version first. The WandaVision Halloween episode look needs the red velvet bodysuit, headpiece, red cape, pink pantyhose, opera gloves, and red boots. The Scarlet Witch version centers on the red cosplay coat over a leather bustier and leggings with black boots. The Multiverse of Madness version starts with the full costume set and adds the wig, red eyeliner, and burgundy boots. The headpiece and the red coat are the two essential anchor pieces for their respective versions.
The Civil War quote lands best when someone tries to tell you how to behave at the party. Use it once. It works once.
Yes, and the specific reason is that Wanda has appeared across enough major MCU releases that she has broad recognition across both casual viewers and dedicated fans. The three distinct looks also give you real options depending on how deep into the fandom your crowd runs, from the widely recognizable red coat and tiara to the more niche WandaVision Halloween episode version.
The Multiverse of Madness version, because a full costume set covers most of the outfit in one purchase. The WandaVision version requires the most individual pieces and the most attention to detail to look accurate. The Scarlet Witch version sits in between.
No, but they are the detail that separates a general Scarlet Witch costume from the Darkhold-corrupted version specifically. In that film, Wanda’s eyes shift red when she uses corrupted chaos magic. If you want that look, the lenses do more work than any other single accessory. Skip them if you just want a general Wanda costume, and use the red eyeliner instead for a version of the same effect.
The headpiece is the red tiara-style crown Wanda wears as the Scarlet Witch. The alternative full WandaVision costume set includes a mask version, which covers a similar visual function but is not the same piece. If accuracy matters for your crowd, buy the headpiece separately. If you just need the silhouette to read at a glance, the set version is fine. More on the character’s different uniform versions at the WandaVision Wiki.
The Scarlet Witch version is the most recognizable outside of WandaVision viewers, since the red coat and tiara read broadly as a Marvel villain-hero at a glance. The WandaVision Halloween episode version is the most niche and will mostly land with people who watched the show. The Multiverse of Madness version sits in between, recognizable to anyone who saw the film but less so to general MCU fans.