Why are Scuba Wetsuits Always Black?

Hi Mark, why are wetsuits mostly black? Why don't manufacturers produce more colourful designs? It would be so much easier to tell divers apart underwater if everyone is wearing different coloured wetsuits. Are there advantages for wetsuits being black?

Join this channel to get access to perks

SUPPORT THE CHANNEL

You can help support the channel in three easy ways;

1. On YouTube with Super Chat or become an SDM Army Fan and get access to exclusive early access to videos, emojis, shoutouts, and your burning questions answered.

2. Use our affiliate link to make your next scuba purchases

3. Subscribe to one of our print or digital magazines


Watch Our Most Watched Video

Watch Out Most Recent Video

Watch Our Members Only Videos


Scuba Diving Mag – Scuba Diving, Underwater Photography, Hints & Advice, Scuba Gear Reviews
DIVERNET – Scuba News, Underwater Photography, Hints & Advice, Travel Reports
GO Diving Show – The Only Dive Show in the United Kingdom
Rork Media – For advertising within our brands


Follow Us On Social Media

Instagram
Facebook
YouTube

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Telegram

LET’S KEEP IN TOUCH!

Get a weekly roundup of all Divernet news and articles 🤿

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

30 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Pedro Ferreira
Pedro Ferreira
15 days ago

I thought one of the reasons for black was to be less visible and don’t scare marine animals…

DTT
DTT
15 days ago

the issue is identification under water. try buying different color fins, hoody, dsmb to make yourself more easily identifiable to your buddy. some dms have a toy dangling from there tank

Dave A
Dave A
15 days ago

I live in Australia, and we have Big Bitty things think there called man eating Sharks, sharks have very poor eyesight im told by the surfers that surf at the bottom of Aus where the Great Whites eat people, so they all where Black .

Ben Heckendorn
Ben Heckendorn
15 days ago

Waterproof use blue, cressi got some red at the hood. But I guess Beuchat did it very smart, they added just colored lines. So you get some color in your wet-/drysuit and semi dry.

Funny fact, wetsuits for female divers are very colorful, maybe girls and women are also more open to buy a colored wetsuits.

Caros Editorial
Caros Editorial
15 days ago

Black is so generic 🫢 I want my own gear to not look like the rental stuff lol 😬

Sarah Garrett
Sarah Garrett
15 days ago

Black is slimming. If you have a few more pounds than you prefer, and you wear a tight rubber suit, black helps camouflage them.

Gregory Carter
Gregory Carter
15 days ago

Bull Sharks like blue, Whites like yellow, open water white tips like burgundy———-

Woody
Woody
15 days ago

There used to be a tv show called SeaHunt. The hero of the show wore a grey wetsuit. Since none were available, someone was in charge of painting his grey wetsuit for every episode.

dario110011
dario110011
15 days ago

Black also absorbs more sunlight, which helps keep you warm when in or out of the water.

Andrew
Andrew
15 days ago

OMG P-ang, you can’t just ask wetsuits why they aren’t black!

P-Ang
P-Ang
Reply to  Andrew
14 days ago

I’m sorry

leborde
leborde
15 days ago

Kalypse offers a wide range of colors on their tailor-made wetsuits and you can select the color for each and every piece of the wetsuit.

TravisTheSavage
TravisTheSavage
16 days ago

The only problem i have with black wet suit is the possibility of being mistaken for a seal.

Nate W
Nate W
16 days ago

I’d imagine that color doesn’t matter when diving the deeper depths too… the real question is why aren’t there hoods with Batman ears?

1003willy
1003willy
16 days ago

Mark, you’re right about latex being milky white. I am from Malaysia where we produce latex and latex related products such as foam, hand grips latex gloves and etc. The milky white colour of raw latex gets yellowish when going through the drying and pressing stages and colour is really hard to maintain if they were to dye the latex beforehand. That is why the best colour which can withstand all the processing is black and it is also inexpensive to get neoprene in black. Coloured neoprene goes through a whole different process which I dont think happens in the factories near where I live.

RobertGReno
RobertGReno
16 days ago

“I’ll stop wearing black when they invent a darker color.”

― Emmanuelle Alt

P-Ang
P-Ang
14 days ago

Thanks for featuring my question, Mark!

Robert Elzey
Robert Elzey
14 days ago

As with anything else. When you get down so far the color would just fade away anyway

Pelle Lidell
Pelle Lidell
15 days ago

I’ve always worn black scuba gear for the following pragmatic reasons; it doesn’t look busy, I don’t have to worry about colour matching, and I don’t want unnecessary interest from oceanic white tips…

Michael 777
Michael 777
13 days ago

I would like you to do a review on the new APLOS AP30 dive light rated to 300 feet of water. With 3 light setting choices! It’s claiming it has 3000 luminous and will light for 1 1/2 hours at full intensity

Lance
Lance
13 days ago

Navy divers and Navy seals wear black , a macho kind of thing.

The Squid
The Squid
12 days ago

It is also cheaper to produce Black Neoprene.

Lidewij Vos
Lidewij Vos
11 days ago

One problem is that manufacturers make predominantly pink and purple suits for women. A lot of women do not want a pink wetsuit, so we buy black. Manufacturers should stop thinking most women like pink😣

Ben Heckendorn
Ben Heckendorn
15 days ago

#askmark
I got a personal question, some diver who run a YouTube channel do also a kind of meet and greet, so you meet them they do even dives then. So I wonder if you thought about something similar?
I just thought, maybe there are some who would love to do some dives with you, so they would get a chance to meet you too.

Scuba Diver Magazine
Scuba Diver Magazine
Reply to  Ben Heckendorn
2 days ago

Yeah, I’m always up to go scuba diving and meet new people.

Eddie Wiggs
Eddie Wiggs
15 days ago

#AskMark I am beginning to shop for a regulator set. I’ve got one dive shop in my area who sells a couple of brands. If you were to buy a reg would you lean towards the brands closest to you for service and warranty or would you be ok going with a different brand, with a particular feature, that the nearest retailer would be two or more hours away?

Scuba Diver Magazine
Scuba Diver Magazine
Reply to  Eddie Wiggs
2 days ago

Personally, I’d rather get the brand that I trust or prefer over the nearest. It’s rare that they need to visit the service centre and with any luck a new dealer will open near you.

A nearby service centre is convenient. But, in this modern world there are service centers that you can send your regulators to and they ship them back to you.

Eddie Wiggs
Eddie Wiggs
Reply to  Eddie Wiggs
2 days ago

@Scuba Diver Magazine Thanks for the reply. My local dive shop carries Aqualung, Atomic, and Dive-Rite which are all reputable brands. The big question is if I found say a Mares or a Sherwood, etc that looked appealing would it be better to stick to what is locally available for service after the sale.

Scubavery
Scubavery
15 days ago

#ASKMARK Sorry if this has been asked before.Snorkel or no snorkel. As when I dive overseas to some dive charters/agencies insist that you have to have a snorkel when diving.What’s your thoughts 🤔

Luke XVIII
Luke XVIII
16 days ago

#askmark is there any plans for a review on the new seal SL:01 drysuit?

related Divernet Posts

Popular Divernet Posts

Connect With Us

30
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
Enable Notifications OK No thanks