What Is a Rain Jacket?

A rain jacket is a waterproof, breathable outer layer designed to keep you dry in rain. It uses a waterproof membrane or coating and taped seams, with a DWR finish that makes water bead off the surface. Rain jackets range from light packable shells for emergencies to burly hardshells for sustained storms.

GearLayeringBeginner
A rain jacket is a waterproof, breathable outer layer designed to keep you dry in rain. It uses a waterproof membrane or coating and taped seams, with a DWR finish that makes water bead off the surface. Rain jackets range from light packable shells for emergencies to burly hardshells for sustained storms.
JobKeep you dry in rain
TechMembrane/coating, taped seams, DWR
RangePackable shells to hardshells
CareReproof the DWR periodically

A rain jacket is a waterproof, breathable outer layer designed to keep you dry in rain. It uses a waterproof membrane or coating and taped seams, with a DWR finish that makes water bead off the surface. Rain jackets range from light packable shells for emergencies to burly hardshells for sustained storms.

How it works

A membrane like Gore-Tex, taped seams, and a DWR finish keep water out — it’s a type of shell, overlapping with the hardshell.

Care

Reproof the DWR when water stops beading to keep it performing.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a jacket waterproof?

A waterproof jacket combines a waterproof-breathable membrane or coating (which blocks liquid water while letting vapor escape), seams sealed with waterproof tape, and a DWR (durable water repellent) finish on the face fabric that makes rain bead and run off rather than soaking in.

Rain jacket vs hardshell?

They overlap — both are waterproof shells. 'Rain jacket' often suggests a lighter, simpler, more affordable waterproof for everyday and general outdoor use, while 'hardshell' implies a tougher, more technical jacket for mountaineering and severe weather.

How do you reproof a rain jacket?

When water stops beading and starts soaking into the face fabric, wash the jacket with a tech wash and reapply a DWR treatment (wash-in or spray-on), then often heat-set it with a tumble dry or warm iron per the label. This restores the repellency without replacing the jacket.

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