Skip to content
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant

TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket Review (2026)

Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. We stock this product; commissions do not influence our review.

★★★★½ 4.4/5

Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial

TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket — Key Specifications
Brand TICONN
Category Rainwear
ANSI/ISEA 107 rating Class 3
Key features Waterproof shell; fluorescent yellow with black lower panels; reflective striping
Typical price $28.99

The TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket is a rated Class 3 high-visibility rainwear from TICONN, stocked at $28.99. It's built for crews who need one grab-it-and-go rain layer that keeps them compliant the moment weather rolls in — roadway, utility, and general construction — and this review covers what the listing actually documents, where it beats its closest rival, and who should buy something else.

Why the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket Stands Out

Most rain shells make you choose between staying dry and staying rated. The TICONN rain jacket carries an ANSI Class 3 high-visibility rating on a genuinely waterproof shell, with black lower panels placed exactly where jobsite grime lands first — so the garment keeps looking serviceable weeks after a solid-color shell would look trashed.

Specification and Configuration

What the listing commits to: waterproof shell; fluorescent yellow with black lower panels; reflective striping. The Class 3 rating is the load-bearing spec — it's what an inspector reads off the garment label, and it determines which job requirements this garment can satisfy on its own. Size and color options run on the linked Amazon listing rather than as separate stocked variants.

Fit guidance for hi-vis rainwears follows the outer-layer rule: only visible material counts toward compliance, so this garment earns its keep worn as the outermost layer. Rain gear specifically must be sized over work clothes and mid-layers — when between sizes, go up; a shell stretched tight wicks water through at the shoulders. Browse the full lineup in the Hi-Vis Rainwear collection to compare against everything we stock.

Where It Falls Short

Its limits, honestly: Standing water and all-day storm exposure from the waist down — a jacket alone leaves your legs soaked; step up to the two-piece rain suit.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Waterproof shell
  • Class 3 rating stated on the listing
  • $28.99 — fair for the construction
  • From a brand we stock across the high-visibility catalog

Cons

  • Single-listing size/color selection happens on Amazon, not as stocked variants
  • Standing water and all-day storm exposure from the waist down

Who Should Buy It

Order the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket if you are crews who need one grab-it-and-go rain layer that keeps them compliant the moment weather rolls in — roadway, utility, and general construction.

Who Should Skip It

Skip it for standing water and all-day storm exposure from the waist down — a jacket alone leaves your legs soaked; step up to the two-piece rain suit.

How It Compares

Against its own big brother, the TICONN two-piece rain suit, the jacket wins on price and on/off speed; the suit wins any job where you're out in weather past the first hour. Same brand, same Class 3 shell logic — the difference is whether your legs are part of the problem. Both sit inside the wider field ranked in our buyer's guides, and the Hi-Vis Rainwear collection carries the complete ladder. Head-to-head rival: TICONN Rain Suit.

Other High-Visibility Options

Hi-Vis Guides

Browse by Category

Frequently Asked Questions

What ANSI rating does the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket have?

The Amazon listing states Class 3. That's the rating an inspector reads off the garment label, and it's what determines which job requirements the garment satisfies alone.

How much does the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket cost?

$28.99 at the linked Amazon listing. Prices track the live listing, and size or color selections there can shift the number.

TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket vs TICONN Rain Suit — which should I buy?

Against its own big brother, the TICONN two-piece rain suit, the jacket wins on price and on/off speed; the suit wins any job where you're out in weather past the first hour. Same brand, same Class 3 shell logic — the difference is whether your legs are part of the problem.

Who is the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket best for?

Crews who need one grab-it-and-go rain layer that keeps them compliant the moment weather rolls in — roadway, utility, and general construction.

When should I skip the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket?

Standing water and all-day storm exposure from the waist down — a jacket alone leaves your legs soaked; step up to the two-piece rain suit.

What sizes does the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket come in?

The size run (and color options where offered) lives on the linked Amazon listing — we deliberately don't restate it, because listings update. Order hi-vis outerwear roomy: it goes over work clothes, and compliance depends on the garment sitting right.

Can I wear the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket as my only high-visibility garment?

Yes, worn as the outermost layer — a Class 3 garment satisfies any requirement written at or below that class. Cover it with an unrated layer and the rating stops counting.

Is TICONN a good brand for hi-vis gear?

TICONN is a value-tier safety brand with one of the strongest price-to-spec ratios in hi-vis — we stock its hoodies, bombers, rainwear, and shirts across our high-visibility catalog, and its Class 3 claims have been consistent across the line.

What's the difference between the fluorescent fabric and the reflective tape?

They work in different light. Fluorescent background material converts UV into visible brightness — that's your daytime and dusk conspicuity. Retroreflective tape bounces headlight beams straight back at the driver — that's your night visibility. ANSI/ISEA 107 requires minimum areas of both, which is why a faded shell or cracked tape each independently retire a garment.

Does OSHA require a hi-vis rainwear specifically?

OSHA requires high-visibility apparel for exposures like flagging (29 CFR 1926.201), and FHWA rules require ANSI 107 Class 2 or higher on federal-aid highway rights-of-way — but neither names a garment format. A rainwear satisfies the requirement when it carries the specified class and is worn as the outermost layer.

How do I verify ANSI compliance when the garment arrives?

Read the sewn-in label. A compliant garment states the standard (ANSI/ISEA 107), its class (1, 2, 3, or E), and its type (R, O, or P). If the label is missing or states less than the listing claimed, that's your answer — the label, not the product page, is what an inspector reads.

Is the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket actually waterproof?

The listing states: waterproof shell. No budget shell is submersion gear, but for worn-in-the-rain work that claim holds when seams and closures are intact.

Why does dark rain gear create a safety problem?

Wet pavement and overcast light kill contrast — the exact conditions rain gear gets worn in are the conditions dark clothing disappears in. That's why the outer rain layer, not the vest under it, must carry the visibility function.

Does the TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket work over a winter jacket?

Sized up, yes — that's a normal cold-rain stack. The rain layer goes outermost so its visibility material stays visible; check the size chart on the listing and buy for your layered chest measurement, not your t-shirt size.

What does ANSI Class E mean on rain pants?

Class E is the ANSI/ISEA 107 rating for pants and overalls. Alone it isn't a compliant garment; paired with a Class 2 or 3 top it upgrades the whole outfit to a Class 3 ensemble — the highest rating. That pairing rule is why hi-vis bottoms are worth buying rated rather than plain.

The Bottom Line

The TICONN Hi-Vis Rain Jacket does its job at its price: waterproof shell with Class 3 at $28.99. Rated 4.4/5 on documented spec, configuration, and value for the intended buyer.


About the Author

Steven Eaton is the founder of WC Safety and an industrial PPE specialist who sources and evaluates high-visibility apparel for industrial, roadway, and utility buyers.

How We Review

Reviews draw on the manufacturer's published listing data, ANSI/ISEA 107-2020 garment classification, and OSHA/FHWA visibility requirements. We do not run lab tests or invent specifications; where a listing states no ANSI class, the review says so. Ratings reflect documented spec, configuration, and value.

Affiliate Disclosure

WC Safety is an Amazon Associate and earns commissions on qualifying purchases through links on this page. Affiliate relationships do not influence our ratings.

Editorial Standards

Claims are drawn from listing data and published standards. WC Safety does not invent specifications or test results. Report errors to safetynw2012@gmail.com.

Previous article RHINO RESCUE IFAK Refill Kit with CAT Gen-7 Tourniquet, 17 Pieces Review (2026)

Leave a comment

* Required fields