Home Technique How to swim freestyle faster without getting tired
Technique

How to swim freestyle faster without getting tired

If you fade halfway down the pool, the problem is almost never fitness. It is usually technique leaking energy on every stroke. Here is how to fix it.

We have all been there. You push off the wall feeling great, and by the far end your arms are heavy and your breathing is ragged. The good news is that this is rarely a fitness problem. It is almost always technique quietly leaking energy on every single stroke.

Tidy up a few things and the same swim suddenly feels easier. Here is where to look first.

Going faster is rarely about pulling harder. It is about giving the water less to fight against.

Fix your body position first

This is the big one. If your legs sink, you are dragging a parachute behind you the whole way. Aim to swim “downhill”: press your chest gently into the water so your hips and legs float up behind you.

  • Keep your head in line with your spine, eyes down, not looking forward.
  • Reach long out the front rather than crunching short and choppy.
  • A gentle, steady kick from the hips keeps the legs up without burning you out.

Breathe on a rhythm, not in a panic

Late, rushed breathing wrecks more swims than anything else. Breathe on a set rhythm so air is never an emergency. Most people do well breathing every three strokes, which keeps you balanced on both sides. Exhale steadily into the water so all you have to do when you turn is breathe in.

Lengthen your stroke, do not just spin

Turning your arms over faster feels like trying harder, but it usually just means more small, slipping strokes. Get a proper hold of the water out front and push it all the way past your hip. Count your strokes per length and, over a few weeks, try to bring that number down while holding the same pace.

Pace it properly

If you sprint the first lap you are writing a cheque the rest of the swim has to cash. Start a touch slower than feels natural and build. Negative-splitting, finishing faster than you started, feels far better than fading.

The quick version

  • Float high: chest down, hips and legs up.
  • Breathe on a rhythm and exhale into the water.
  • Long, strong strokes beat fast, slippy ones.
  • Start controlled, finish strong.

Pick one fix and give it your full attention for a couple of weeks. Stacking small wins is how freestyle quietly gets faster.

Bella
Written by

Bella

Bella is the swimmer behind Elite Swimmer HQ. An Aussie who grew up obsessed with the pool and raced butterfly, she writes the guides, gear breakdowns and technique tips she wishes she had read sooner.