How to Dry a Whitewater Kayaking Wetsuit

How to Dry a Whitewater Kayaking Wetsuit

Why Drying Your Wetsuit the Right Way Matters

After a day on the river, your whitewater kayaking wetsuit is soaked with water, sweat, and whatever the rapids threw at it. How you dry it decides whether it lasts three seasons or falls apart in one. Neoprene holds moisture deep in its cells, and trapped damp is where mildew, that sour funk, and slow material breakdown all begin. The good news is that drying a wetsuit correctly takes almost no effort once you know the steps. The key is patience and avoiding two big mistakes: direct sun and high heat. Both feel like shortcuts, but they bake the neoprene, crack the seams, and shorten the life of your gear. A properly dried kayaking wetsuit stays flexible, smells clean, and keeps its warmth where you need it on cold runs. In this guide we walk through exactly how to dry a whitewater kayaking wetsuit, step by step, plus a few habits that make the whole thing easier when you are paddling several days in a row.
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Whitewater kayaking wetsuit hanging to dry on a wide hanger in shade

A wide hanger in the shade is the gentlest way to dry neoprene and protect the seams.

Step-by-Step: Drying Your Whitewater Kayaking Wetsuit

1

Rinse it first. Flush the wetsuit inside and out with cool fresh water to clear river grit, salt, and sweat before any drying begins.

2

Squeeze, never wring. Gently press the water out by hand. Twisting the neoprene damages the cells and weakens the seams.

3

Dry the inside first. Turn the suit inside out and hang it so the lining dries first, since that is the side touching your skin and holding the most sweat.

4

Use a wide hanger in the shade. Drape it over a thick or folding hanger in a shaded, breezy spot. Thin wire hangers stretch the shoulders out of shape.

5

Flip and finish. Once the inside is dry, turn it right side out and hang it again until the outer layer is fully dry before you store it.

Mistakes That Quietly Ruin Neoprene

The fastest way to wreck a whitewater kayaking wetsuit is to hang it in full sun to dry quicker. UV breaks down neoprene and fades the material, and the heat makes it stiff and brittle over time. Same story with radiators, tumble dryers, and hot car interiors. Heat is the enemy. Another common slip is leaving the suit balled up wet in a gear bag overnight, which is how mildew and that locked-in smell take hold. If you paddle multiple days and the suit never fully dries, a clean towel roll helps: lay the suit flat on a dry towel, roll them together, and press to pull out extra moisture before hanging. Avoid folding a wet wetsuit along the same crease repeatedly, since that wears a weak line into the neoprene. And resist the urge to scrub with regular detergent. Harsh soap strips the material. A dedicated wetsuit wash, used now and then, keeps things fresh without the damage. Treat the drying step as part of your paddling routine, not an afterthought, and the suit pays you back with years of warmth.
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Common Questions

How long does it take to dry a whitewater kayaking wetsuit?

In a shaded, breezy spot it usually takes 8 to 24 hours depending on thickness and humidity. Drying the inside first and flipping it speeds things up.

Can I put my wetsuit in the dryer?

No. Tumble dryers and any high heat break down the neoprene, crack the seams, and ruin the stretch. Always air dry in the shade.

Why does my wetsuit smell even after drying?

The smell comes from bacteria trapped in damp neoprene. Rinse the suit after every paddle, dry it fully inside and out, and use a wetsuit wash now and then.

What is the best way to store a wetsuit between trips?

Only store it once it is completely dry. Hang it on a wide hanger in a cool, dark place rather than folding it tightly, which creates weak creases.

Keep Your Gear Dry From River to Car

Drying starts with not soaking everything else in your kit. The Dry Bag keeps your dry clothes, phone, and keys safe while your wetsuit drips, and it doubles as a clean spot to stash the wet suit on the drive home. Simple, tough, and built for paddle days.

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