I spent years recommending the wrong breeches to beginner riders. Here is what I have learned.
The terminology alone is confusing enough to make people give up and just buy whatever is cheapest. Jodhpurs, breeches, tights, silicone seat — it sounds like a different language. Let me break it down in plain terms.
The actual difference between breeches and jodhpurs
Breeches end just below the knee and are worn with tall boots. They have a tapered leg that sits inside the boot shaft.
Jodhpurs go all the way to the ankle with a flared cut at the calf. They are worn with jodhpur boots (short paddock boots) and gaiters, or with paddock boots alone.
Neither is better. They suit different riding styles and boot preferences.
The grip thing: full seat, knee patch, or none?
This is where most people get confused.
No grip: Fine for casual trail riding and beginners learning to develop an independent seat. Grip can actually mask poor balance by sticking you to the saddle artificially.
Knee patch: A strip of suede, leather, or silicone on the inner knee. Helps with stability in posting trot and jumping. The middle ground option.
Full seat: Silicone or leather covering the entire seat and inner thigh. Used heavily in dressage. Keeps you in the saddle during extended sitting work. Can feel uncomfortable if you are doing a lot of rising trot.
My honest take: most intermediate riders benefit more from knee patch breeches than full seat. Full seat is often over-prescribed.
Fabric matters more than you think
| Fabric | Best for | Downside |
|---|---|---|
| Cotton/Lycra blend | Year-round, breathable | Less durable |
| Microfiber | Competition, sleek look | Can get hot |
| Fleece-lined | Winter riding | Too warm in spring |
| Technical synthetic | All-weather, wicks sweat | Pricier |
For summer riding in Spain or southern Europe: go for at least 20% Lycra content and a lighter fabric weight. You will thank yourself by August.
Sizing: the problem nobody talks about
Breeches run small in the waist and generous in the thigh. If you are between sizes, size up — you can always wear a belt, but you cannot ride comfortably in breeches that are too tight in the thigh.
Also: check the inseam length. Most brands size for a 170–175cm rider. If you are taller or shorter, look for brands that offer long or short inseam options.
What about riding tights?
Riding tights have taken over the leisure and trail market in the last five years. They look like athletic leggings but have a reinforced inner leg panel. They are:
- More comfortable for long hacks
- Machine washable without special care
- Generally cheaper than traditional breeches
- Not accepted in most competition arenas
If you are not competing, there is zero reason not to wear riding tights. The stigma around them has largely disappeared.
Budget guide
- Under €40: Decent for lessons and occasional use. Avoid very cheap synthetics — they wear out at the inner thigh quickly.
- €40–€80: The reliable range. Brands like HKM and Waldhausen operate here. Good for regular riders.
- €80–€150: Better fabric, more precise sizing, competition-ready. Pikeur, Kingsland, Harry's Horse.
- €150+: Premium materials, Italian tailoring, dressage-specific cuts. Cavalleria Toscana, Pikeur Lugana.
If you are in Spain and want to compare specific models with Spanish sizing guides, Rincón del Valle carries a solid range across all price points, including plus sizes and options for pregnant riders.
One last thing: wash your breeches inside out on a gentle cycle and hang them to dry. The grip panels degrade fast in a tumble dryer.
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