Pool vs Open Water Swimming: Which Is Better for Training?
Pool vs Open Water Swimming: Which Is Actually Better for Training?
If you’ve ever willingly got into freezing British water and called it “refreshing”… this blog is for you.
And if you’ve ever stared at a black line at the bottom of a pool questioning your entire existence… also for you.
At MySwimCo, we coach swimmers in both environments. We love both. But here’s the truth that might ruffle a few wetsuits:
👉 You should be doing around 90% of your swimming in the pool.
Bold claim? Maybe. Correct? Also yes.
Let’s break it down properly.
🏊♂️ Pool Swimming: Where Swimmers Are Built
📸 IMAGE IDEA: indoor pool, swimmer underwater, coaching shot
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The pool is your training ground. It’s controlled, predictable, and—crucially—where real improvement happens.
✅ Benefits of Pool Swimming
1. You Can Actually Fix Your Technique
In a pool, everything is consistent:
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Clear water
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No waves
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No chaos
Which means you can:
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Focus on body position
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Improve your breathing
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Refine your stroke
This is exactly why at MySwimCo we focus heavily on video analysis and technique work in the pool.
👉 Open water exposes your flaws. The pool fixes them.
2. Progress Is Measurable (And That Matters)
In the pool:
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100m is always 100m
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Your pace is trackable
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Your rest is controlled
You can measure:
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Stroke count
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Speed
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Efficiency
Compare that to the sea, where you think you swam straight but somehow ended up halfway to France.
👉 If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it.
3. You Can Train Consistently
No tides. No weather changes. No jellyfish plotting against you.
That means:
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More sessions completed
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Higher quality training
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Less mental fatigue
👉 Consistency beats intensity over time.
❌ Drawbacks of Pool Swimming
1. It Can Be Boring
Let’s not sugarcoat it.
Swimming up and down a black line for an hour:
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Isn’t glamorous
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Isn’t exciting
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Sometimes feels like punishment
2. It Doesn’t Replicate Race Conditions
Pools don’t prepare you for:
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Open water starts
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Waves
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Cold water
So you can feel amazing in the pool… then panic slightly in a lake.
3. Turns Give You “Free Speed”
Unless your race has walls (it doesn’t), turns:
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Give you momentum
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Break up your effort
👉 Open water doesn’t offer those little rests.
🌊 Open Water Swimming: Where It Gets Real
Open water is less “training session” and more “controlled chaos”.
And that’s exactly why it matters.
✅ Benefits of Open Water Swimming
1. It’s Specific to Race Conditions
If you’re doing a triathlon, you need to practise:
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Sighting
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Swimming straight
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Handling other swimmers
👉 This is something the pool simply can’t fully replicate.
2. It Builds Mental Toughness
Cold water. Limited visibility. The occasional mid-swim existential crisis.
You learn to:
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Stay calm under pressure
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Control your breathing
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Keep moving forward
3. It’s Actually Enjoyable (Sometimes)
On a good day:
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Calm water
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Nice weather (rare, but it happens)
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Decent visibility
It’s one of the best swimming experiences you can have in the UK.
❌ Drawbacks of Open Water Swimming
1. Your Technique Falls Apart
As soon as conditions get tough:
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Your stroke shortens
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Your breathing gets rushed
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Efficiency drops massively
👉 You’re surviving, not improving.
2. Training Is Inconsistent
Conditions change constantly:
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Wind
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Temperature
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Water quality
So your session quality varies every time.
👉 That makes structured progress difficult.
3. There Are Safety Risks
Even experienced swimmers need to consider:
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Cold water shock
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Fatigue
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Visibility issues
This isn’t the place to push limits blindly.
🧠 Why 90% Pool, 10% Open Water Is the Sweet Spot
Here’s the simple truth:
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Pool = Skill + Fitness Development
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Open Water = Skill Application
Think of it like this:
👉 You don’t learn to drive on the motorway.
👉 You learn in a controlled environment first.
Same with swimming.
📊 What Most Swimmers Get Wrong
A lot of swimmers (especially triathletes) think:
“I race in open water, so I should train in open water.”
Sounds logical. It’s not. Most elite swimmers and triathletes:
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Do the majority of training in the pool
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Use open water closer to race day
Why? Because:
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Technique drives efficiency
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Efficiency drives speed
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Speed comes from repeatable training
👉 Not from battling waves twice a week.
🏁 The Ideal Training Split
For most swimmers:
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90% Pool Training
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10% Open Water Practice
Closer to an event:
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Shift towards 70% pool / 30% open water
But your foundation?
👉 Always built in the pool.
💬 Final Thoughts
Open water swimming is exciting. It’s social. It feels adventurous. But if your goal is to:
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Swim faster
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Feel smoother
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Improve efficiently
Then the truth is simple:
👉 The pool is where the real progress happens.
🚀 Want to Improve Your Swimming Faster?
At MySwimCo, we specialise in:
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One-to-one coaching
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Technique-first swimming
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Video analysis
Whether you’re:
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Learning to swim
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Training for a triathlon
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Or just want to stop fighting the water