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Home»lifestyle»You break it, they’ll fix it: 11 outdoor brands that stand by their gear for the long haul | Life and style
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You break it, they’ll fix it: 11 outdoor brands that stand by their gear for the long haul | Life and style

yourlifeafterretirementBy yourlifeafterretirementJune 7, 2026
You break it, they’ll fix it: 11 outdoor brands that stand by their gear for the long haul | Life and style
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Outdoor gear can be delicate. Sometimes all it takes is a broken buckle or jammed zipper to render a $500 sleeping bag or jacket unusable. But it doesn’t have to end up in the trash.

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Many outdoor brands now tend to their gear long after it’s sold with repair programs, replacement parts, DIY repair kits, and thoughtful designs that help keep it in the wild longer – and out of the landfills. You can mail in your damaged product, or just buy the buckle, tent pole, or strap to fix it yourself at home. Mainstream retailers such as REI have also expanded repair services, making gear repair more accessible to people who don’t have the skills or tools to do it themselves.

We asked real outdoor enthusiasts for their repair experiences, and found 11 companies that truly go the distance, along with some examples of hard-wearing gear worth buying from them. These products aren’t indestructible, but the companies behind them are making meaningful efforts to keep them on the trail long after that first hole or tear.

Patagonia Down Sweater

Patagonia

Down Sweater

from $138.59

Patagonia Down Sweater product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of Patagonia
$289 at Patagonia (women’s)
Now $138.59, originally $250 at Patagonia (men’s)

Patagonia is the industry’s gold standard for repair, thanks in large part to its long-running Worn Wear program and extensive in-house repair services. In fact, when we put a call out for repair stories, the first dozen responses tied back to Patagonia products – that’s not an exaggeration. We heard tales of everything from patched jackets to fixed duffels. In one, California-based Elise Moore shared a story of when she shipped in a Down Sweater – Patagonia’s popular lightweight insulated jacket known for its durability and versatility – with melted materials and zipper. “I was so impressed with their service and workmanship,” she says. “It was free and looked brand new!” Customers typically pay $15 for roundtrip shipping on repairs.

Patagonia

Down Sweater

from $138.59

Chaco Z/1 Adjustable Strap Classic Sandal

Chaco

Z/1 Adjustable Strap Classic Sandal

from $66.99

Chaco Z:1 Adjustable Strap Classic Sandal
Photograph: Courtesy of Chaco
Now from $66.99, originally $95 at Chaco (women’s)
Now from $66.99, originally $95 at Chaco (men’s)

Unlike most other sandals that hit the dump once the straps fray, Chacos are built to be rebuilt. Through the ReChaco program, owners can resole sandals, replace straps and buckles, repair webbing, and even customize older pairs by swapping in new webbing colors. The affordable repair menu ranges from $10 for buckle replacement to $50 for an entire resole. Chaco’s Z/1 Classic is arguably the brand’s most iconic model with the original single-strap design, grippy outsole, and podiatrist-certified footbed. It’s especially popular among hikers, raft guides, and travelers thanks to its delightfully absurd durability. Add in the repairs, and you’ll have these for life.

Chaco

Z/1 Adjustable Strap Classic Sandal

from $66.99

Nemo Riff Endless Promise Down Sleeping Bag

Nemo

Riff Endless Promise Down Sleeping Bag

from $399.95

Nemo Riff Endless Promise Down Sleeping Bag
Photograph: Courtesy of Nemo
$399.95 at Nemo Equipment (women’s)
$399.95 at Nemo Equipment (men’s)

Nemo pushes repairability further than almost any company in the industry. Through its repair program, Nemo fixes damaged gear, sells replacement parts and offers at-home repair options for productssuch as sleeping bags and tents. And, it doesn’t end when your gear is beyond repair. The Endless Promise collection of backpacks and sleeping bags are 100% recyclable at the end of life. All you have to do is ship your bag back to Nemo and they’ll recycle every bit of it into a new product (and send you a small gift card as thanks). The Riff is one of Nemo’s most popular backpacking sleeping bags. For me as a side sleeper, the extra room at the knees makes it feel almost luxurious and cozy – which says a lot when you’re sleeping on the ground.

Nemo

Riff Endless Promise Down Sleeping Bag

from $399.95

Osprey Tempest Pro 30

Osprey

Tempest Pro 30

from $250

Osprey Tempest Pro 30 product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of Osprey
$250 at Spokex
$250 at Osprey

Turns out, Osprey’s Almighty Guarantee is just that: a legitimate guarantee, no matter how many years or miles you’ve put on your backpack. Osprey repairs everything from torn mesh pockets and damaged zippers to worn straps and broken buckles, helping keep heavily used packs on the trail for years longer than they might otherwise last. This brand policy has helped build a loyal following around packs such as the Tempest Pro 30, a womens-specific technical pack that balances low weight with bombproof durability for big day hikes with a lot of gear. After all, backpacks are an investment that can cost hundreds of dollars. It’s much easier to buy once and cry once when you know the brand will stop your tears with a free repair whenever you need.

Osprey

Tempest Pro 30

from $250

Kifaru Hellbender Backpack

Kifaru

Hellbender Backpack

$875

Kifaru Hellbender Backpack product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of Kifaru
$875 at Kirafu

Kifaru packs are designed for the kind of hard hunting use that eventually leaves scars – blown zippers, worn fabric, busted buckles and frame rub. Rather than steering customers toward replacement, the company repairs damaged gear and even sells a small field repair kit for quick backcountry fixes. Denver-based Erin Anderson said Kifaru repaired a broken zipper on her Hellbender, a made-in-the-USA hunting pack with plenty of pockets and webbing straps for hunters needing to cart a load of meat out of the backcountry. Kifaru charged about $90 an hour in labor to repair wear on the bottom fabric where the frame had rubbed through. The repairs weren’t cheap, but Anderson said keeping a heavily used pack in service still felt worthwhile compared with completely replacing it.

Kifaru

Hellbender Backpack

$875

Ortlieb Velo-Sling Flex

Ortlieb

Velo-Sling Flex

from $90

Ortlieb Velo-Sling Flex product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of Ortlieb
$90 at Ortlieb
$90 at REI

Germany-based Ortlieb has built a lot of its reputation around the idea that busted gear doesn’t mean your biking adventure is … well, a bust. The company’s repair program includes professional repairs and replacement spare parts intended to help extend the lifespan of bags and panniers. It’s not free: labor costs $15 an hour and parts are billed as needed. If you’d prefer to try your own hand, Ortlieb offers a slew of YouTube videos that make it easier to install spare parts from their catalog. The waterproof Ortlieb Velo-Sling Flex is a versatile commuter bag that converts from a shoulder sling bag to a handlebar bag, making it equally useful on and off the bike.

Ortlieb

Velo-Sling Flex

from $90

Petzl Tikkina Headlamp

Petzl

Tikkina Headlamp

from $19.95

Petzl Tikkina Headlamp product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of REI
$19.95 at REI
$19.95 at Backcountry

Even smaller brands are getting in on the repair action. Colorado-based Kellan Goldberg said her budget-friendly Petzl Tikkina stopped working just before the end of the three-year warranty period. After she contacted the company, Petzl asked her to send the headlamp in for repair instead of replacing it outright. “Took only two weeks and I was super happy!” Goldberg said. Petzl’s repair and warranty program covers products ranging from climbing gear to headlamps, and replacement parts such as headlamp battery doors, straps, mounting plates and other defective materials. This helps keep gear in use longer instead of turning otherwise functional equipment into throwaway items after a single failure.

Petzl

Tikkina Headlamp

from $19.95

Mountain Hardwear Boundary Ridge Gore-Tex Jacket

Mountain Hardwear

Boundary Ridge Gore-Tex Jacket

from $286.98

Mountain Hardwear Boundary Ridge Gore-Tex Jacket
Photograph: Courtesy of Mountain Hardwear
Now $286.98, originally $575 at Mountain Hardwear (men’s)
Now $286.98, originally $575 at Mountain Hardwear (women’s)

While some repair programs only cover newer products, Mountain Hardwear is out here fixing gear that’s legally old enough to drink. Ashley Mayer, a longtime hiker, took advantage of the brand’s repair policy and recently sent in her 2004 Confluence Parka, a jacket the brand no longer makes (the Boundary Ridge is its successor and arguably one of my favorite ski jackets with its rugged weatherproofing, bevy of pockets and slightly-longer length). All of the zippers had delaminated and the lining was torn. Still, Mountain Hardwear fixed everything and re-did the waterproof coating. “They took care of all of it for [the cost of] shipping,” she says.

Mountain Hardwear

Boundary Ridge Gore-Tex Jacket

from $286.98

Rab Neutrino Pro Down Jacket

Rab

Neutrino Pro Down Jacket

from $450

Rab Neutrino Pro Down Jacket product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of Rab
$450 at Rab Equipment (women’s)
$450 at Rab Equipment (men’s)

Did you know 54% of Americans would try to fix their own broken zipper? Rab, a British brand known for its technical down jackets, surveyed 500 Americans and found that most of them aren’t afraid of a little DIY, which is why it offers replacement parts through its service center, as well as in-house repairs and even professional cleaning. When the zipper on her Rab Neutrino puffer failed, Amanda Stone, a Denver resident, mailed it back to Rab for repair. One of the brand’s most popular jackets, the Neutrino is prized for its warmth, weather resistance and lightweight performance. “It was fairly easy, and the replacement was free,” she says. “Although they did charge me for a thorough cleaning.”

Rab

Neutrino Pro Down Jacket

from $450

Big Agnes Copper Spur UL 3

Big Agnes

Copper Spur UL 3

from $440

Big Agnes Copper Spur UL 3 product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of REI
Now $440, originally $629.95 at Backcountry
$649.95 at REI

With Big Agnes, a snapped pole doesn’t mean you should kiss your tent goodbye. The freestanding, ultralight Copper Spur UL3 has earned a reputation among backpackers for pairing trail-friendly weight with enough room to be comfortable. But Ann Driggers, from Aspen, Colorado, said her Big Agnes Copper Spur took a beating during “hellacious winds” on Utah’s White Rim Trail when a pole snapped and punched a hole through the tent fabric. “I contacted them and they said, ‘send it in,’” Driggers says. The company repaired the torn fabric, replaced the damaged pole and returned the tent at no charge. Along with repairs, Big Agnes also sells replacement tent poles, stakes, buckles, and other spare parts designed to help extend the lifespan of heavily used camping gear.

Big Agnes

Copper Spur UL 3

from $440

Arc’teryx Sabre Jacket

Arc’teryx

Sabre Jacket

from $440

Arc’teryx Sabre Jacket product photo
Photograph: Courtesy of REI
$440 at Arc’teryx Outlet
Now $524.93, originally $750 at REI

Nobody would call Arc’teryx jackets cheap. But the company’s generous repair policy explains why skiers are willing to spend the premium. Purpose-built for skiing and snowboarding, the men’s Sabre combines Pfas-free Gore-Tex protection with a relaxed fit that allows for plenty of cozy layers and mobility – no matter where you end up on the mountain. James Ibbotson, of Aspen, Colorado, said he ripped the back panel of his Sabre Jacket while skiing between trees, so he mailed it back to Arc’teryx for repair. The company fixed the jacket and sent it back. The following season, Ibbotson tore the jacket again while skiing (Yes, he goes big!). This time, Arc’teryx determined the damage was beyond repair. But, there was a silver lining: instead of fixing it, they sent him a code for a brand-new replacement jacket.

Arc’teryx

Sabre Jacket

from $440


Other pieces you might enjoy from the Filter, the Guardian’s guide to buying fewer, better things:

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