Apparel

Peter Millar eb66 Performance Five-Pocket Golf Pants

Peter Millar โ€” Peter Millar eb66 Performance Five-Pocket Golf Pants ยท By Lauryl ยท Dec 24, 2025

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The golf pant that thinks it's a pair of premium chinos โ€” Peter Millar's eb66 delivers country-club polish and genuine on-course performance, if you can stomach the price tag.


The Big Picture

The eb66 is Peter Millar's flagship golf pant, part of the Crown Sport collection and named after the 66 holes the brand's founders played on the day they conceived the company. It's the pant Cameron Young wears on Tour, and it occupies a deliberate position in the market: a five-pocket design that looks and feels like upscale casual wear while packing moisture-wicking, two-way stretch performance fabric underneath.

Peter Millar eb66 Performance Five-Pocket Golf Pants Full-length front view in gray with polo and sneakers

The construction is 100% polyester woven twill with two-way stretch, moisture-wicking properties, and quick-dry capability. The updated comfort waistband features a printed mesh lining beneath the rear waistband for breathability, with a button closure and zip fly. Five pockets โ€” two front, two back, and a dedicated tee pocket above the front-right โ€” with sewn-in eyelet rivets that reference the jean-inspired five-pocket heritage without looking casual. Subtle Crown logo branding appears as a patch on the back right waistband and a raised tab on the front right pocket.

At $178 MSRP, the eb66 is the most expensive pant in our catalog by a significant margin โ€” $33 more than the Greyson Montauk ($145) and nearly double the Nike Tour Repel Flex ($100). That pricing puts it squarely in the luxury golf apparel category, competing with Lululemon Commission and G/FORE rather than the performance-first offerings from FootJoy and Nike. The question isn't whether it's good โ€” it is โ€” but whether the premium justifies itself against excellent alternatives at half the price.


First Impressions & Looks

The eb66 makes its case immediately out of the packaging. The updated yarn with an applied matte finish gives the fabric a refined, almost brushed appearance that reads as premium from across the room. This doesn't look like performance polyester โ€” it looks like well-made cotton twill, which is the entire point. The five-pocket silhouette with sewn-in eyelet rivets bridges the gap between golf pant and dress chino more convincingly than any competitor I've tested.

The color palette is excellent: nine options ranging from safe (Black, Navy, Khaki) through sophisticated (Gale Grey, Stone, Iron) to genuinely bold (Billiard, Bordeaux, White). This is a wider and more interesting range than most golf pants offer, and the matte finish means even the lighter colors maintain a polished appearance rather than looking washed out.

The trim/slim fit creates a modern silhouette with a 13-inch leg opening (size 36) and an 11-inch front rise. It's tapered without being skinny, and the proportions look correct whether you're wearing them with golf shoes, loafers, or dress shoes. The overall impression is of a pant designed by people who understand that golfers increasingly want their course wardrobe to function as their everyday wardrobe.


Comfort & Fit

The fabric is exceptional. The polyester twill has a soft, smooth hand feel that sits comfortably against the skin โ€” noticeably more refined than the functional-feeling fabrics in performance-first alternatives. The two-way stretch provides give through the hips and seat, and the updated comfort waistband with mesh lining keeps the waistline breathing even on warm days.

A critical sizing note: The eb66 runs small. Multiple fit reports consistently recommend sizing up one to two sizes in the waist. A golfer who normally wears a 34 should seriously consider a 36, particularly if they prefer any room through the seat and thigh. The trim fit combined with the shorter rise means the pant fits closer through the body than most competitors, and the two-way stretch (rather than four-way) provides less accommodation than stretchier alternatives. If you're between sizes or carry any weight through the midsection, size up without hesitation.

The size range itself is generous: waists from 30 to 44 with inseams from 30 to 35 inches. The five inseam options are particularly valuable โ€” most competitors offer only two or three โ€” making it easier to find a proper length without tailoring.


Performance

Stretch & Mobility

The two-way stretch delivers fluid movement through the swing without restriction. The fabric stretches excellently through various lies and stances โ€” full swings, awkward sidehill positions, crouching to read putts โ€” without binding or pulling. Shape retention is strong: the polyester twill snaps back to its original form rather than bagging out at the knees after a few hours of bending and walking.

The honest distinction here is that this is two-way stretch, not four-way. Competitors like the Greyson Montauk (Italian eight-way stretch) and the Nike Tour Repel Flex (four-way stretch) offer more multidirectional flexibility. In practice, the eb66's two-way stretch is sufficient for golf โ€” I never felt limited during a swing โ€” but golfers who prioritize maximum flexibility above all else will find more accommodation elsewhere.

Moisture Management

The moisture-wicking fabric pulls sweat away from the skin effectively, and the quick-dry properties mean the pant recovers quickly from perspiration or incidental moisture. The mesh-lined waistband contributes to overall breathability. For a pant that looks this refined, the performance fabric technology works genuinely well โ€” you're not sacrificing function for aesthetics.

Durability & Care

Machine wash cold, tumble dry low โ€” straightforward care that doesn't require special handling. The fabric maintains its structure and elasticity through repeated washing, which is critical for a $178 pant that needs to justify its investment over multiple seasons. The matte finish on the yarn holds up well, and the sewn-in eyelet rivets are more durable than pressed alternatives. Shape retention across washes is excellent โ€” the eb66 looks as sharp on the twentieth wear as the first.


Off-Course Versatility

This is where the eb66 earns its premium over performance-first competitors. The five-pocket design, matte twill finish, and slim silhouette make these genuinely appropriate for settings where most golf pants would look out of place. A business-casual office, a nice dinner, a weekend out โ€” the eb66 handles all of these without the telltale shine or athletic cut that identifies most performance pants as exactly what they are.

The Bordeaux and Billiard colorways in particular create outfit options that simply aren't possible with the black/navy/grey palette of typical golf pants. If you're the golfer who plays a morning round and heads straight to brunch, a meeting, or an evening event, the eb66 eliminates the need to change. It's the most versatile pant in our catalog for course-to-everything-else transitions, and that versatility is a meaningful part of the value proposition at $178.


Verdict

The Peter Millar eb66 is the best-looking, best-feeling golf pant I've tested, and it's not particularly close. The polyester twill fabric delivers a hand feel and visual refinement that performance-first alternatives can't match. The five-pocket design with sewn-in rivets bridges golf and casual wear more convincingly than any competitor. The moisture management works. The shape retention is excellent. The color range is the best available. And the off-course versatility genuinely justifies a portion of the price premium.

Where the eb66 gives ground is in the details that matter to value-conscious and performance-first golfers. At $178, it's nearly double the price of the Nike Tour Repel Flex ($100, frequently $50-77 on sale) and $33 more than the Greyson Montauk ($145), which offers superior eight-way stretch in equally premium Italian fabric. The two-way stretch, while sufficient, lags behind four-way alternatives. And the sizing runs small enough that ordering sight-unseen is risky without trying them on first.

The eb66 is for the golfer who values aesthetics and fabric quality as much as performance โ€” who wants their golf pants to be their best pants, period. If that's you, the investment is justified. If you primarily want functional performance at a reasonable price, the FJ Tour Fit ($115) and Nike Tour Repel Flex ($100) deliver 90% of the on-course experience at half the cost.