SWIMMING & TRIATHLON · GEAR GUIDE

Open Water Swimming Gear Guide: Wetsuits, Tow Floats, and Safety Essentials

Buoyancy requirements, sighting technique, tow float types, and thermal protection by water temperature.

Open Water Swimming Gear Guide
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Wetsuit Fundamentals for Open Water Swimming

Open water swimming differs from pool swimming in three critical ways: water temperature varies dramatically, there are no lane markers for navigation, and environmental hazards from waves, currents, and boat traffic create safety risks. The right gear addresses all three.

A triathlon wetsuit is the most impactful piece of open water gear you can buy. Unlike standard surfing wetsuits, triathlon wetsuits are designed for forward swimming motion — thin neoprene in the shoulder and arm panels allows full freestyle rotation while thicker panels in the core provide buoyancy and warmth.

Key insight: Wetsuit buoyancy can lift your hips 3–5cm higher in the water, reducing drag and improving body position for swimmers with natural hip-sinking tendencies. Even intermediate swimmers gain 5–10% swim speed improvement from a well-fitting wetsuit.
Orca Athlex Float Wetsuit — Buoyancy-optimized triathlon wetsuit with flexible shoulder panels, excellent mid-range choice
Program: Amazon Associates

Water Temperature Guide: What to Wear

Water temperature — not air temperature — determines what you should wear for an open water swim. The two risks are hypothermia (too cold) and hyperthermia (overheating in warm water with a wetsuit on).

Water TempRecommended GearNotes
Above 78°F (26°C)Swimsuit onlyWetsuits may be banned in competition; overheating risk
72–78°F (22–26°C)Optional wetsuitWetsuit legal in most triathlons below 24°C for USAT
60–72°F (15–22°C)Wetsuit recommendedStandard triathlon wetsuit (3/2mm full suit)
50–60°F (10–15°C)Wetsuit + neoprene cap + glovesAdd thermal cap and possibly booties
Below 50°F (10°C)Full thermal wetsuit + cap + gloves + bootiesCold water shock risk — never swim alone
Caution: Cold water shock can cause involuntary gasping and cardiac stress even in fit swimmers. Below 60°F (15°C), always enter the water slowly, wear a thermal wetsuit, and never swim alone.

Tow Floats and Safety Buoys

A tow float is a brightly-colored inflatable buoy attached to a waist band via a short leash that trails behind you while you swim. They serve two purposes: high-visibility safety (boats can see you from much greater distances) and a rest point if you become fatigued or injured mid-swim.

Most tow floats also double as dry bags — you can store keys, a phone, and snacks inside the waterproof compartment. This makes them practical for solo open water training regardless of distance.

ZONE3 Swim Tow Float and Dry Bag EDITOR'S CHOICE

The ZONE3 combines maximum visibility (bright orange/pink options) with a fully waterproof dry bag compartment that fits a phone, keys, and energy gels. The leash attachment sits low on the waist and does not interfere with swim stroke. Mandatory for solo open water training in our opinion.

~$45 Check Price on Amazon

Orca Safety Swim Buoy — Compact tow float with 20L dry bag, excellent for longer training swims
Program: Amazon Associates

Sighting and Navigation in Open Water

Without lane lines, open water swimmers rely on sighting — lifting the head briefly every 6–10 strokes to spot landmarks, buoys, or the far shore. Poor sighting technique costs energy and adds distance; efficient sighting takes 6 months to develop into a consistent habit.

For training, bright landmark buoys help establish navigation patterns. Some open water training venues use a buoy course that simulates race conditions. GPS swim watches (Garmin Forerunner, COROS Pace 3) can track your route and highlight how much zigzag distance you are adding due to poor sighting.

Tip: Practice the "alligator eye" sighting technique — briefly lift only your eyes above the waterline before your breathing stroke, not your full head. This minimizes the hip drop that slows you down and makes sighting far less fatiguing.
Garmin Forerunner 265 with Open Water Swim Mode — GPS tracking with open water swim mode to analyze sighting accuracy
Program: Amazon Associates

Thermal Protection: Caps, Gloves, and Booties

When water temperature drops below 60°F (15°C), a standard wetsuit is no longer sufficient alone. The head, hands, and feet are extremities with high surface-area-to-volume ratios — they lose heat faster than the torso. Neoprene thermal caps (2mm), gloves, and booties address each area.

A 2mm neoprene thermal cap adds approximately 2°C of perceived warmth and significantly extends comfortable swim time in cold conditions. Neoprene swim gloves provide grip and warmth but reduce the feel of the water, which can affect stroke technique temporarily.

Orca Neoprene Thermal Swim Cap BEST COLD WATER VALUE

At 2mm neoprene, the Orca thermal cap provides meaningful warmth without the bulk of a dive hood. It fits under a standard swim cap, which is the setup used by most cold-water open water swimmers in competitions where neoprene caps are permitted.

~$32 Check Price on Amazon

Open Water Safety Gear Checklist

Never enter open water without the following minimum safety provisions:

Safety ItemPurposeRequired Below
Tow float / safety buoyVisibility + rest pointAll conditions
Bright swim cap (orange/yellow)Boat visibilityAll conditions
WetsuitBuoyancy + thermal68°F (20°C)
Neoprene thermal capHead heat retention60°F (15°C)
Neoprene glovesHand heat retention55°F (13°C)
Swim buddy / shore supportEmergency assistanceBelow 60°F / always advised

Sources & Further Reading

  1. USAT Open Water Swimming Rules and Guidelines 2025
  2. Tipton, M. (2012) — Cold Water Immersion: The Role of Acute Cardiovascular Stress, Experimental Physiology
  3. British Triathlon Federation — Open Water Swimming Safety Guidelines
  4. Orca, ZONE3, Blueseventy wetsuit specification sheets

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a wetsuit for open water swimming?

Below 68°F (20°C), a wetsuit is strongly recommended for both warmth and buoyancy. Above 78°F (26°C), wetsuits can cause overheating and may be banned in competition. Between 68–78°F, a wetsuit is optional depending on your cold tolerance and distance.

Is a tow float mandatory for open water swimming?

Not legally mandatory for solo training, but strongly recommended by every open water swim organization. A tow float makes you visible to boats, provides a rest point if you fatigue, and can signal distress in an emergency. Cost is $35–$60 — trivial compared to the safety benefit.

What is sighting in open water swimming?

Sighting is the technique of briefly lifting your eyes above the waterline every 6–10 strokes to spot landmarks, buoys, or the far shore. Without lane lines, sighting is essential to swim a straight course. Poor sighters can add 10–20% extra distance through zigzagging.

Can I swim in the ocean alone?

Strongly not recommended. Even experienced open water swimmers should have a shore-based spotter, kayak escort, or swimming partner when conditions allow. At minimum, always carry a tow float with a phone inside and tell someone your planned route and return time.

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