Best Women’s Ski Jackets of 2025/26 (Tested)

Best Women’s Ski Jackets of 2025/26 (Tested)

Pockets

Pockets are often a personal preference for ski clothes, but we love a jacket with just the right amount of well-placed pockets. Hand pockets are essential with all but the most minimal jackets, and we appreciate chest pockets for storing ski passes and easy-access essentials. 

Inclusive sizing

Columbia is one of our favorite brands for inclusive sizing and plus-size options for women’s ski clothes, though all the jackets in our review are offered in at least up to an XL.

Durability

Durability is essential in a ski jacket, especially if you get out often. While this is not always the case, higher-priced jackets are often constructed with better materials, making them more durable. And typically, a thicker, heavier jacket will often be more durable than an ultralight one. 

What’s most important to consider here is your priorities and how often you’ll use the jacket. Durability will be a top concern if you’re a die-hard resort skier that laps the resort every weekend. However, if you only ski a few times a year, you won’t put as much wear on the jacket and can get a good life out of a less expensive, less durable coat. 

Our advice: If you ski a lot and it’s within the budget, it’s worth splurging on a quality shell. It will last longer and perform better, meaning you’re less likely to replace it. That probably means less money spent and less in the landfill in the long run.

Powder skirts

Many ski-specific jackets include a powder skirt, sometimes called a snow skirt. This layer of fabric snaps around your waist inside the jacket; it’s designed to keep snow from getting underneath your outer layers. These can be very helpful, but with many ski-specific designs leaning toward longer hems and folks now often sporting bibs instead of pants, they’re not always necessary. Whether or not a powder skirt is a priority depends on personal preference.

Insulation

Whether or not you want your ski jacket to be insulated depends on a combination of personal preference and what type of skiing you do most often. Dedicated resort skier? An insulated ski jacket will keep you warm on the lift ride and cut the chill on the way down. Prefer to earn your turns? That insulation will be a sweaty sauna on the uphill, so opt for a non-insulated shell that you can layer under if necessary.

Suppose you ski in a wide variety of temps and conditions. In that case, a non-insulated jacket offers more versatility, but you also need to have multiple other layering options on hand. 

Pant attachment systems

Some jackets have small hooks or other attachment systems that hook to compatible pants. Often, these are brand and style specific (meaning you’d need the matching jacket and pants to benefit from this). This feature can be handy but also finicky and unnecessary. Overall, while it can be nice and is liked by some skiers, we don’t consider it a necessary feature when testing or selecting jackets for ourselves.

The newest model of the Arc’teryx Sentinel ski jacket features a snap in that back with the Arc’teryx Sentinel ski pants, which is a winner in our Best Women’s Ski pants guide. This helps reduce snow drift and leads to a streamlined fit.

Recco technology

A lot of outdoor apparel features RECCO technology these days. Essentially, this is a reflective technology built into the jacket that aids search and rescue efforts. It’s a nice feature but not essential. The primary and most important reason we don’t think it’s essential: RECCO is not a replacement for an avalanche transceiver. More often than not, RECCO technology is helpful in body recovery. If you are backcountry skiing and traveling in avalanche terrain, it is crucial that you get out with reliable partners and that you all have an avalanche transceiver and are trained on how to use it.

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