Climate is a rain-gear brand we carry because the question "do you have rain suits?" comes up every spring and every fall. Two-piece PVC or polyurethane-coated rain suits, jacket-and-bib or jacket-and-pants combos, in yellow or olive, in three sizes. That's the whole pitch. Cheap, real, keeps the water out.
What we keep on the shelf
PVC rain suit, two-piece — the classic yellow or green rain suit with the hooded jacket and the bib pants or pull-on pants. Vinyl or PVC-coated polyester, fully waterproof seams, snap-front jacket, drawstring hood.
Polyurethane-coated rain jacket — slightly lighter, slightly more breathable than straight PVC, same waterproof construction.
Hi-vis rain jacket — yellow or orange with reflective striping, ANSI Class 2 in some models. For utility crews and road crews working in wet conditions.
Rain pants and bibs sold separately if you only need the bottom half.
Fit notes
Climate runs roomy by design. Rain gear is meant to fit over your work clothes — a Climate large fits over a hoodie and a jacket. If you want to wear it directly over a t-shirt, size down. Most customers wear them over their normal work layers, so true-to-size is the right call.
Boot-cut leg openings on the bibs and pants are wide enough to fit over most work boots without bunching. Drawstrings or snaps secure the cuff.
Where it falls short
Climate is not breathable rain gear. If you've worn Gore-Tex or eVent, this is the opposite — PVC and polyurethane are waterproof but they trap heat and moisture from the inside. After an hour of moving around inside a Climate suit on a 60-degree day, the inside is wet from sweat. There's no way around it at this price tier. If you need breathable rain gear, you're looking at $200+ jackets, not $40 ones.
Durability is decent but not great. The seams hold for a season or two of regular use. After that, the seams start to crack and leak. Plan on replacing every 18–24 months if you wear them regularly.
PVC gets stiff in cold weather. Below 40°F, the material loses some flex. Polyurethane handles cold better.
Sizing is loose — three sizes (S/M/L or M/L/XL depending on model) means the fit isn't precise. It's a rain suit, not a tailored garment.
Bottom line
Climate is the cheap, real rain suit. If you need to keep the rain out for a four-hour shift twice a year, this is the right buy. If you're working outside in rain forty hours a week, look at higher-tier rain gear (we don't sell it, but we'll point you to who does). Come in — we keep the floor stocked April through May and again September through October.