TL;DR: For most private-label outdoor jackets, 10,000mm waterproof / 10,000g breathability is the sweet spot — it handles sustained rain and light snow, and it’s what mid-market brands actually spec. 5,000mm covers urban commuters and school/team jackets at lower cost; 20,000mm+ only matters for ski, alpine, or “spec-sheet marketing” positioning. The rating is measured by hydrostatic head (ISO 811); the number on your hangtag is only as honest as the lab report behind it — always ask for the fabric mill’s test certificate.
Written by PTOUTWEAR (Pt Outdoor Products Factory, est. 2013, Taizhou, Zhejiang — 240 workers, 20 lines, ~200,000 jackets/year, ISO 9001 + SGS). Last updated: July 2026.
What does the mm number actually mean?
It’s the height of a water column the fabric withstands before leaking, tested per ISO 811 (hydrostatic head). 10,000mm means the fabric held back a 10-meter column of water. It measures the fabric only — a jacket’s real-world waterproofness also depends on seam taping, zippers, and hood design, which is where cheap jackets fail first.
Which rating tier should I spec for my product line?
| Tier | Waterproof | Breathability | Real-world use | Typical construction | Cost vs 5K base |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | 5,000mm | 3,000–5,000g | Commuting, school & team jackets, light rain | 2L PU coating | baseline |
| Mid (sweet spot) | 10,000mm | 8,000–10,000g | Hiking, camping, daily outdoor retail | 2L/2.5L membrane | +15–25% |
| Performance | 15,000–20,000mm | 15,000–20,000g | Ski/snowboard, multi-day trekking | 2.5L/3L, fully taped | +40–70% |
| Expedition | 20,000mm+ | 20,000g+ | Alpine, professional use | 3L bonded, fully taped, YKK Aquaguard | +80% or more |
Two buying rules from our production floor:
- Don’t pay for 20K fabric on a jacket with critically-taped seams. Water enters at untaped seams long before the fabric fails. A balanced 10K fabric + fully taped build outperforms a 20K fabric + partially taped build in rain.
- Breathability sells the jacket; waterproofness prevents the return. End users return jackets that feel clammy. If your budget forces a choice, drop from 20K to 10K waterproof and keep breathability ≥8,000g.
Where do factories cut corners on ratings?
- Quoting the membrane’s spec, not the finished laminate’s. Lamination and DWR wash-off reduce performance; ask for a test report on the finished fabric lot.
- “Waterproof” with no number. Usually 3,000mm PU coating. Fine for windbreakers, not for rainwear claims.
- No re-test after color changes. Dye lots can shift coating performance; large brands re-test per lot — you can request this in your QC plan (AQL inspection).
- DWR confusion. DWR makes water bead on the surface; it is not the waterproof layer. PFC-free DWR is now the EU-safe default — we run PFC-free DWR documented by our fabric mills.
What should I ask a supplier before confirming the spec sheet?
- Show me the ISO 811 hydrostatic head report for this exact fabric article number.
- Is the jacket fully taped or critically taped? (Ski/rainwear: fully taped, non-negotiable.)
- What’s the MVTR test method for the breathability claim? (Numbers from different methods aren’t comparable.)
- What zippers are specced — standard, water-repellent coil, or YKK Aquaguard?
- Will you re-test bulk fabric or only the sample yardage?
FAQ
Q: Is 5,000mm enough for a rain jacket?
A: For short urban exposure, yes. For marketed “rainwear” that users wear 1+ hours in rain, spec 10,000mm with fully taped seams.
Q: Does a higher mm rating make the jacket less breathable?
A: Not inherently — but budget high-mm fabrics often sacrifice MVTR. Spec both numbers, not just the waterproof one.
Q: What rating do school and team jackets need?
A: 5,000mm/5,000g with critically taped seams covers sideline and commute use at the best price point — this is our default spec for uniform programs (MOQ 30 pcs).
Q: Can I put “20,000mm waterproof” on my hangtag legally?
A: Only with a test report for the production fabric. Unsupported claims are a consumer-protection risk in the EU and US — keep the mill certificate on file.
PTOUTWEAR manufactures hardshell, softshell, 3-in-1 and ski jackets for private-label brands, schools and teams — MOQ 30 pcs, 1-pc sampling, 4-week lead time, DDP shipping. ptoutwear.com