Review rating summary for the best Rain Jackets for Men from our review: Best Rain Jackets for Men of 2024.
www.outdoorgearlab.com
I would agree with a lot of what Aisparks said above.
"Find something cheap and waterproof with underarm zips and a back vent you can open, it'll be as functional as an expensive jacket."
My experience hiking in warm weather has been about the same. I have had tremendous luck with Marmot and consider one of their older designs my favorite rain jacket. My opinion, get something waterproof, lightweight (stupid to have a heavy rain jacket), and it MUST have pit zips NO MATTER WHAT. When moving in warm rain, pit zips are the difference between a mini sauna and staying dry under the jacket.
This one is a no frills model I've found to be less than comfortable overall, but very functional for a great price and is the one I recommend most often. The 2 we had didn't leak for 3 years with water repellent added when washing. It has pit zips; the website LIES as I couldn't find it at $45 or I would have picked 2 up for family members:
Over the last ten years, we've tested close to 60 of the best rain jackets designed for men. This review features 17 of the market's top contenders. Pitted...
www.outdoorgearlab.com
I have a Frogs Togs very large jacket that I wear OVER my rain jacket in very heavy downpours. It is a horrible rain jacket if worn by itself (no breathing, water rolls into sleeves, hood too large unless you have a helmet on, etc). But having that over layer over your primary rain jacket is sometimes the difference between wetting out and staying dry. if you're moving in rain for extended periods, rain jackets do wet through sometimes.
for urban and short usage, the semi-disposable ponchos work great as we'll OVER a rain jacket, or just to toss over to get into a store
you need the semi-disposable because the ones less than $7 each are just dry cleaning thickness plastic and will literally last 0-3 uses. the heavy duty ones that are closer to $20 will last in terms of durability, but you're better off with a jacket for the weight. the semi-disposable ones are the thicker plastic that you can stretch/tear with effort, but likely will last a long while. those are the ones I prefer
I bought them last at Target, but can't find them on the website anymore.
Don't forget to use quality footwear or at least water repellant spray your footwear if walking for a while in rain. Maybe not flip flops.