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I Tried It: Why this rain jacket was my favorite golf product of 2025

blue rain jacket with white background

The first thing I learned was how to pronounce it. KJUS. Rhymes with “juice.” As in the famed Norwegian alpine racer Lasse Kjus, co-founder of the upscale ski-wear brand, which has since branched into golf apparel.

The second thing I learned was that I couldn’t afford it. Or, rather, that I didn’t want to spend $500 on myself — not when that kind of money could buy me 10 rounds at my local muni. Priorities. Dressing for the weather has never topped my list.

Then a friend sent me a KJUS Pro 3L 2.0 rain jacket as a pre-holiday gift. My perspective changed.

A lot of golf apparel brands boast about that their products marry fashion and function. This jacket lives up to that pledge, and more, with a snazzy, streamlined cut and an array of sophisticated features. It’s what Batman’s Alfred might design if his boss had plans to peg it in foul conditions before heading to a black-tie dinner. It looks great. Works great, too.

KJUS Pro 3L 2.0

Experience rain protection like never before with this fully stretch waterproof jacket. Body-zoned X-stretch panels further enhance the flexibility while innovative rain gutters at the wrist ensure uninterrupted play in wet conditions. Ideal for cool to cold days.

The material is waterproof and windproof. No biggie there. Any self-respecting rain jacket can rightly claim the same. What’s different is the fabric — so lightweight it feels like a second skin — and the way it’s stitched together, with stretchy X-shaped panels that give you near-frictionless freedom of movement. There’s a high collar in back for added protection, and small folds in the sleeves that function like gutters, funneling water away from your hands. Inside each side pocket are discreet cinches that solve a common rain-gear problem. Tug on the cords, and they pull the jacket snug to your torso, so there’s no billowing fabric to interfere with your swing — an especially helpful feature when you’re putting or attempting a touch shot around the green.

I’ve worn it on real courses, in real rain. I’ve had what the kids call “lived experiences” in the jacket, and I’ve liked it. A lot. Whether I would have bought it for myself is a hypothetical I’m happy to have to answer. What I know is that now that I own it, I’m far less bothered when the sunny forecast is wrong.

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