⚖️ Scuba Diving Guide
Scuba Weighting Guide
How to find your ideal buoyancy weight, perform the buoyancy check, and avoid the most common weighting mistakes.
5 min read
Scuba Diving
Skills
Why Correct Weighting Matters
Being correctly weighted is one of the most important — and most frequently neglected — skills in recreational diving. Overweighting makes you fight to stay neutrally buoyant, burns through your air supply faster, ruins your horizontal trim, and increases the risk of an uncontrolled rapid ascent. Underweighting is dangerous in a different way: you cannot complete safety stops or maintain controlled ascents against positive buoyancy.
Correct weighting means effortless neutral buoyancy at depth, minimal reliance on your BCD, and a clean, relaxed dive. Getting your weight dialed in is one of the highest-return investments you can make as a diver.
The Standard Buoyancy Check — Step by Step
The surface buoyancy check is the gold standard for dialing in your weights before any dive, especially when using new equipment or diving in unfamiliar conditions.
- Enter the water in full gear with your BCD completely empty and a full tank.
- Hold a normal, relaxed breath — do not take a big gulp of air.
- You should float at eye level, with the crown of your head just above the surface.
- Exhale fully. You should slowly sink beneath the surface.
- If you float too high on a full breath: add weight.
- If you sink on a full breath without exhaling: remove weight.
- Repeat until you achieve the correct result, then make a note of the configuration.
⚠️ End-of-Dive Check
A full tank is heavier than an empty one — always verify buoyancy with a near-empty cylinder too. With approximately 50 bar / 500 psi remaining, you should be able to hover neutrally at 5 metres (15 ft) for your safety stop without adding air to your BCD. If you are positively buoyant at this point, you need slightly more lead.
Factors That Affect Your Weight
Every diver's required weight is different. Several factors combine to determine how much lead you actually need.
Body Weight
Body mass is the foundation. A common starting point is roughly 10% of body weight in saltwater and 7% in freshwater. This is a rough baseline — other variables can shift the number significantly in either direction.
Exposure Suit
Neoprene is extremely buoyant, and suit thickness is the single biggest variable in your weight calculation. The table below shows typical additional weight required over a base swimsuit configuration:
| Exposure Suit |
Typical Extra Weight |
| Swimsuit / rash guard | 0 kg |
| 3mm wetsuit | +1 – 2 kg |
| 5mm wetsuit | +3 – 4 kg |
| 7mm wetsuit | +5 – 6 kg |
| Drysuit (shell / membrane) | +4 – 6 kg |
| Drysuit (neoprene) | +6 – 8 kg |
Saltwater is denser than freshwater, so it provides more buoyancy. A diver who is neutrally buoyant in the ocean typically needs to remove 2–3 kg when switching to a freshwater quarry or lake dive. Never assume your ocean weights will work inland without checking.
New divers tend to over-breathe, tense up, and over-inflate their BCDs to compensate for poor buoyancy control. They often need slightly more lead as a result. As technique improves, required weight frequently decreases — this is perfectly normal and a sign of progress.
Weight Placement and Trim
Where you put your weight affects not just buoyancy, but your horizontal trim in the water. Poor trim increases drag, burns air, and damages the reef below you.
- Standard weight belt: Positions weight at the hips. Simple and quick-release, but concentrates mass at one point.
- Integrated BCD pockets: More convenient for travel, distributes weight more evenly around the torso, and can be dropped in an emergency.
- Tank bands / backplate trim pockets: Adds weight behind you, useful for divers who are head-heavy and need to shift balance toward the feet.
- Ankle weights: Primarily used by drysuit divers whose feet and legs tend to float upward due to air trapped at the lower body.
The goal is a horizontal position in the water with minimal effort. If your feet sink, move weight forward or reduce ankle weight. If your head sinks or you feel feet-light, shift weight further back or add ankle weight.
Get a Starting Point Fast
Use our free Dive Weight Calculator to get an estimated starting weight based on your body weight, exposure suit, tank type, and water type. Then fine-tune with the buoyancy check.
Open Dive Weight Calculator →
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I redo the buoyancy check?
Perform the surface buoyancy check whenever something changes: a new wetsuit, a different cylinder, a different water type (salt vs. fresh), or significant changes in your body weight. Even if everything seems the same, it is worth a quick check at the start of a new dive trip after a long break from diving. Five minutes on the surface saves the whole dive.
Why do I need more weight in a drysuit?
Drysuits trap a substantial volume of air inside the suit to provide thermal protection, and that air is buoyant. The undergarments worn beneath a drysuit add additional buoyancy. You need more lead to offset this, and you must also manage buoyancy by venting suit air during ascent — a skill taught in the PADI or BSAC Drysuit Specialty course.
What if I can't remove enough weight on a belt?
If you are already using the minimum belt weight but still feel overweighted, consider switching to integrated BCD pockets, which allow more granular adjustment. Also check your exposure suit — a suit that is too thick for the conditions will require excess lead. Some divers also benefit from switching to a denser wetsuit material that provides the same thermal protection with less buoyancy.
Does weighting change as I use up my air?
Yes — as you breathe down your tank, the cylinder becomes lighter and you become more buoyant. This effect is most pronounced with aluminium cylinders, which shift from negative to positive buoyancy as they empty. This is why the end-of-dive buoyancy check at 50 bar is important: you need enough lead to remain negatively buoyant (or neutral) for your safety stop even with a near-empty tank.