Best Wetsuit Drying for Travel

Best Wetsuit Drying for Travel

Why Wetsuit Drying for Travel Is Its Own Problem

Drying a wetsuit at home is easy. You hang it over the shower rail, walk away, and forget about it. Wetsuit drying for travel is a different story. You finish a session, the next surf spot is three hours up the coast, and you have a dripping 4/3 that needs to go somewhere. Toss it in a backpack and you ruin your dry clothes, your phone, and your camera. Leave it balled up in the trunk and it comes out smelling like a low tide that gave up on life. The neoprene also breaks down faster when it sits wet and folded for days, so a careless travel routine quietly shortens the life of a suit you paid real money for. The fix is not complicated. You need a way to contain the water first, then dry the suit properly when you actually stop somewhere. Get that order right and a wet wetsuit stops being the most annoying thing in your car. The sections below walk through the gear, the steps, and the small habits that make travel days with a wetsuit genuinely painless.
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A wet wetsuit rolled and stored in a waterproof dry bag in the back of a car after a surf session

Contain the water first, dry the suit second. That order saves your luggage every time.

5 Steps for Drying a Wetsuit on the Road

1

Wring it gently before it goes anywhere. Squeeze the legs and arms, never twist hard, and let the easy water run out at the beach instead of in your car.

2

Stash the wet suit in a dedicated waterproof bag. A proper dry bag keeps the water off your clothes, seats, and gear, which is the part most people get wrong.

3

When you stop, hang it inside out first. The inside, the part touching your skin, holds the most water and the most smell, so dry that side before you flip it.

4

Use shade and airflow, not direct sun. Strong sun fades and dries out neoprene over time, so a breezy shaded spot or an open car door does a better job.

5

Rinse with fresh water when you can. Salt and sand sit in the seams, and a quick rinse at a campsite tap or gas station keeps the suit soft and odor down.

Containing the Water Is the Whole Game

Here is the part nobody tells you. The hardest thing about travel days is not drying the suit, it is the wet hour between the beach and wherever you stop next. That is when the water spreads to everything else. A simple plastic bag tears, leaks at the seams, and traps smell with no way to breathe. A real wetsuit dry bag solves it by sealing the water in and keeping your dry gear genuinely dry. Roll the suit instead of balling it, with the inside facing out, and slide it into the bag. The roll holds its shape and the bag does the rest. We are not going to oversell this. A dry bag will not magically dry your suit by itself. What it does is buy you time and keep the mess in one place, so you can deal with the suit on your own schedule. Once you reach camp, the motel, or even a long lunch stop, pull it out, hang it in the shade, and let air do the slow work. Contain first, dry later. That small habit is the difference between a clean car and a soggy one.
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Common Questions

How do I dry a wetsuit if I have no time to hang it?

Wring it out, roll it inside out, and seal it in a waterproof dry bag. It will not fully dry in the bag, but the water stays contained until you reach a spot where you can hang it in the shade.

Can I leave a wet wetsuit in the car overnight?

It is fine for a night if the suit is rolled in a dry bag, but a few days wet and folded starts to smell and wears down the neoprene. Hang and air it out at the first real chance you get.

Should I dry my wetsuit in direct sunlight on a trip?

Avoid long stretches of direct sun. It dries the suit fast but fades the color and stiffens the neoprene over time. Shade with a breeze, or an open car door, dries it gently and lasts longer.

How do I stop my wetsuit from smelling while traveling?

Rinse with fresh water whenever you can, dry the inside first, and never store it damp in a sealed plastic bag for days. A breathable routine and the occasional wetsuit wash keep the smell away.

Keep the Water Off Everything Else

The Dry Bag keeps your wet wetsuit sealed away from your clothes, your gear, and your car seats, so travel days stay clean and easy. Wring, roll, seal, and drive. At $49, it is the simplest fix for the messiest part of any surf trip.

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