What Is the Best Lifejacket for Cruising Couples?

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When it’s just the two of you, your lifejacket isn't just protecting your life—it’s protecting your partner from the ultimate worst-case scenario.

For many cruising couples, the dream is defined by autonomy: just the two of you, the horizon, and the freedom to go where the wind allows. But from a safety perspective, sailing as a duo is a very different game than sailing with a full crew. When you are short-handed, your margin for error narrows.

 

If one person goes overboard, the person remaining on deck is suddenly tasked with the most high-pressure job in maritime safety. They must simultaneously maintain control of the vessel, navigate back to your position, and execute a recovery, all while managing the emotional stress of seeing their loved one in the water. In this scenario, a lifejacket is no longer just a flotation device; it is a critical piece of recovery equipment.

 

Traditional lifejackets assume extra hands are on deck to pull you back aboard. However, when it’s just the two of you, the primary challenge isn't just staying afloat. It’s about surviving the crucial first minutes between the fall and the rescue while the boat is still moving.

 

To choose the best lifejacket for cruising couples, we have to look past the buoyancy rating and toward the mechanics of the rescue. In this guide, we’ll break down what to look for to ensure your safety gear is as resilient as your partnership.

With Safety Gear, Comfort is Key

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The best lifejacket is the one you are actually wearing. This phrase gets thrown around a lot, but for cruising couples, it is a fundamental safety truth. Unlike a racing crew that might be on deck for short, high-intensity bursts, a couple on a passage is often dealing with long, gruelling watches. If a lifejacket is heavy, chafes the neck, or restricts movement, the temptation to leave your lifejacket off “just for a minute” becomes dangerously high.

The Ergonomics of Endurance

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Most traditional lifejackets carry their weight at the back of the neck, and over time, this pulls the head forward and leads to neck strain and exhaustion.

 

For a couple, comfort should be the priority for two reasons: 1) If the lifejacket is comfortable, wearing it becomes a habit, not a chore. 2) Cruising boats are often cluttered with biminis, solar archways, and rigging. You need a lifejacket with a low profile design that doesn't snag on gear as you move around the deck.

Tim and Kelsey from Salty Sunrise Sailing wearing their TeamO Lifejackets

Tailoring the Fit

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Cruising couples aren’t one size fits all. A lifejacket that fits a 6-foot-tall man is going to sit completely differently on a 5-foot-4-inch woman. The best lifejackets for couples offer high levels of adjustability, particularly around the waist and shoulders.

 

We designed our offshore range to sit on the shoulders rather than the neck. By distributing the weight across the stronger muscles of the back, the jacket feels "weightless" during a long watch. We also utilise a soft-shell design that contours to the body, so each lifejacket fits just as securely over a light t-shirt in the tropics as it does over heavy-duty foul weather gear in a North Sea gale.

 

When you’re choosing your kit, look for a lifejacket that stays out of your way until the moment you need it most.

The Danger of Drag: Why Positioning Matters

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For most sailors, the primary safety rule is to stay on the boat. To ensure this, you probably wear a safety harness and tether yourself to the jackstays. It is a logical, effective system... Until it isn't.

 

There is a dark reality to traditional safety harnesses that many sailors don't realise: The Drag Danger. If you fall overboard while clipped into a standard front-attachment harness and the boat is still moving, the tether will pull from your chest. As the boat continues forward, the water pressure hits your back, forcing your face down and into the water. This creates a bow wave over your head, making it nearly impossible to breathe, even if you are conscious and wearing a high-buoyancy lifejacket.

The Problem With Just Two

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On a fully crewed boat, someone can act to bring the boat to a halt immediately. But when you’re cruising as a couple, if you fall over while your partner is below or distracted, it might take them 90 seconds or more to get to the helm, disengage the autopilot, and be able to start the process of getting you back on board. In cold water, under the spray of a wake, those seconds are everything.

 

It only takes a small amount of water inhaled into the lungs to cause secondary drowning. Being towed face-down is a life-threatening emergency that happens before the rescue even begins.

Maggie Adamson and Calanach Finlayson of Solan Ocean Racing

A Step Forward in Safety: BackTow™ Technology

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We developed and patented BackTow™ Technology specifically to solve the issue of being towed face-down in an emergency.

 

If you fall overboard while tethered, engaging the BackTow system means the tow point shifts from your chest to your back – leaving your airway clear. 

 

The result is a total shift in physics:

  • Instead of being pulled face-down, you are rotated into a face-up, seated position.
  • Your head is held high above the water and the boat's wake.
  • You can breathe freely and communicate with your partner while they work to stop the boat.

 

Does BackTow guarantee your life will be saved? No. Let’s be realistic, the ocean is unpredictable, and there are many variables that can change the outcome of a person going overboard. BackTow simply buys the most precious commodity in a crisis: time. It allows the rescuer to focus on safely stopping the vessel without the agonising knowledge that their partner is struggling to breathe at the end of a tether.

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Lifejacket Features for the Cruising Couple

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When you’re browsing for new gear, technical specifications can start to look like alphabet soup. For a cruising couple, you don't need the most expensive lifejacket on the shelf; you need the one that matches your sailing style. To help you make your decision, our choose your lifejacket quiz asks no more than six questions to point you at the TeamO style that suits you best.

 

These are the three most critical decisions you'll make: Buoyancy, inflation system, and safety add-ons.

Buoyancy: 170N or 275N?

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In the sailing world, buoyancy is measured in Newtons (N). A reasonable assumption is that bigger is better, but that's not always the case. We explained why in our blog post What Size Inflatable Lifejacket Do I Need?. These are the most common sizes:

 

170N (The Cruiser’s Standard): This is the ideal choice for 95% of cruising couples. It provides more than enough lift to keep an adult’s head clear of the water, even when wearing standard coastal or offshore foul weather gear. Lifejackets with 170N of lift tend to be less bulky, allowing more easy recovery.

 

275N (The Heavyweight): These are designed for single-handed crossings and in extreme ocean conditions where you might be wearing heavy survival suits that trap air. For most couples, these are unnecessarily bulky and can actually make it harder to pull yourself back into a life raft or over a transom.

Inflation Systems: Pro-Sensor vs. Hammar vs. Manual

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The way your lifejacket inflates is an important decision, and the best type for you depends on the type of sailing you do. 

 

ProSensor (Water Activated): These use a small paper capsule that dissolves when submerged, firing the CO2 cylinder. They are easy to rearm yourself (you'll find rearming kits in chandlers worldwide) and are highly reliable. Modern versions are well-shielded from rain and spray, so accidental firings are rare.

 

Hammar (Pressure Activated): This system fires based on water pressure - once you are around 10cm/4 inches underwater). These tend to be the choice for sailors that are frequently working in very wet conditions or have heavy green water on deck, as they are immune to humidity and spray. 

 

Manual: Some experienced cruisers opt for a manual-only firing head; where the wearer has to pull a toggle to inflate the jacket. The benefit to opting for manual inflation is total control. You can work on a pitching foredeck in heavy spray without the fear of the jacket inflating and restricting your movement. However, if you are knocked unconscious during the fall, the jacket will not inflate. For this reason, we almost always recommend automatic systems for short-handed couples, where the what if of a head injury is a major factor.

Safety Add-ons

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If you’re buying a jacket for offshore passages, ensure these items are fully integrated: 

 

Spray Hood: Spray hoods help to prevent secondary drowning by keeping wind-blown spray away from your airway while you’re waiting for rescue.

Emergency Light: These are essential for night watches. If you go over at 2 AM, your partner needs a beacon to find you.

Crotch/Thigh Straps: These keep the lifejacket from riding up around your ears once you’re in the water, keeping your airway significantly higher.

 

Our Offshore lifejackets have these fitted as standard. In addition to these features, you'll also want to ensure you carry extra rearming kits, and we'd recommend an AIS MOB device as well. 

 

Extra rearming kits: If you’ve gone overboard and your lifejacket has inflated, you’ll need to rearm your lifejacket. Without a rearming kit, your automatic lifejacket won’t be able to support you for a second time.  

 

AIS MOB Devices: In a Man Overboard (MOB) situation with a two-person crew, the greatest challenge for the rescuer can be simply keeping the person in the water in their sight. In even a moderate swell, a human head becomes invisible just a few dozen yards away. This is why AIS MOB devices have become a staple for cruising couples. These small beacons can be tucked inside the lifejacket cover. When the beacon activates, a signal is sent directly to your boat’s chartplotter.

 

Instead of your partner frantically scanning the waves, they have a precise GPS coordinate on the screen leading them straight back to you. When selecting a lifejacket, ensure it has a dedicated pocket or mounting point for these devices. Our covers are AIS ready, to prevent the device from tangling with the inflation lung.

 

Make sure both partners know how to access and activate the AIS, as well as knowing how to read the AIS MOB signal on your specific chartplotter. Safety is a shared skill, not just a shared kit.

Maintaining Your Lifeline

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Choosing the right inflation system is only half the battle; the most advanced lifejacket in the world is only as good as its last inspection.

 

Don't let your passages add to industry statistics. Whether you opt for a manual, automatic, or hydrostatic system, your lifejacket should never be a “fit and forget” piece of gear. For cruising couples, we recommend making the lifejacket check a shared ritual before any major passage:

 

By following the manufacturer’s servicing recommendations and performing regular checks together, you ensure that when it matters most, your gear is as ready for the challenge as you are.

Why Choose a TeamO Lifejacket?

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At TeamO, we don't just build lifejackets; we build recovery systems. Our designs are born from a deep understanding of how sailors actually move, how they fatigue, and most importantly, how they survive falling overboard while tethered.

 

By prioritising ergonomic comfort and reducing the danger of drag with our patented BackTow™ system, our lifejackets are perfectly suited to the cruising couple’s lifestyle.

 

Don’t leave your safety to chance.

 

Explore our Offshore and Coastal ranges today and ensure that your next passage is backed by the most innovative recovery technology on the water.

The Crew of Two Bundle

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To make it easier for cruising couples to upgrade their safety kit together, we’ve created the Crew of Two Bundle. This allows you to build a matching pair of Offshore lifejackets tailored to your specific needs. Whether you both prefer the 170N Offshore for maximum mobility or want to mix and match inflation systems, this builder lets you get both your lifejackets in one go.

 

Your partnership is the heart of your boat. Protect it with gear designed for the way you sail.

 

Still got questions, or need clarification? You're welcome to get in touch. Call us on +44 (0)1489 776000 or email us on info@teamomarine.com.