Iām inclined to say the best rain pant is an inexpensive rain pant, because pants inevitably get beaten around more than a jacketĀknees scuffed on rocks, pants snagged by thorns, seat ground into the dirt.

So, yes, fitting that bill perfectly is something like the Marmot PreCip Pant, just $90 for the full-zip model, $70 for pull-on (www.marmot.com). Those prices are hard to beat. And the pants themselves perform pretty well. They wonāt breathe quite as well as Gore-Tex, but they work fine. Sierra Designsā Peak Bagger Pants ($119; www.sierradesigns.com) are very similar.
Going with Gore-Tex pants doesnāt necessarily mean a big jump price-wise, and the better performance of that material may make the extra bucks worthwhile. L.L. Bean makes a decent pair of GT pants called the Stowaway pant, just $125 (www.llbean.com). But prices do jump pretty steeply after that. Get into a high-performance pant such as the Mountain Hardwear FTX Ultra and youāre talking $295 (www.mountainhardwear.com). For that, you get pants made with the newest Gore-Tex XCR fabric, powder cuffs, abrasion-resistant patches, and a better fit (inexpensive pants tend to fit a little like stove pipes). The ArcāTeryx Beta ARās are similar, and go for about $300 (www.arcteryx.com).
Itās certainly true that the higher-priced pants will outlast cheaper ones, all things being equal. But, Iād say that one pair of Beta ARās will last about as long as three pairs of PreCips, at which point youāre still money ahead. For backpacking and occasional use, Iād go with the PreCips. For a lot of hard use in more extreme conditions, spend the bucks up front.