AbstractHighly regioregular (RR) poly(3‐hexylthiophene)s PHTs are known to exhibit excellent electrical properties in comparison to chemically identical but regiorandom (rr) PHTs. In this study, distinct RR (97% and 55%)‐graded PHTs are subjected to solution blending to spontaneously separate the high‐RR PHT chains from the low‐RR PHT media and develop highly conjugated nanodomains in both solution and film. In the spun‐cast blend films, the rr PHT matrix imparts sufficient deformability of the channel layer required for stretchable organic thin‐film transistors (OTFTs), compared to neat RR PHTs and blends with a deformable polymer. OTFTs including RR PHT/rr PHT blend films show excellent hole mobility (µ) values up to 0.13 cm2 V−1 s−1, surpassing that of the best RR PHT films (0.026 cm2 V−1 s−1) fabricated by ultrasound solution pretreatment. Furthermore, a 50% stretched RR PHT/rr PHT film maintains ≈55% of its µ value at no strain, while RR PHT films show a sudden decrease in µ even at 10% stretch. The simple blending approach imparts deformability to π‐conjugated polymer films for application in stretchable OTFTs.