Equipment

Rescue Tube vs. Ring Buoy: When to Use Which

Rescue tube and ring buoy are not interchangeable. A practical comparison — buoyancy, technique, regulatory positioning, and which is right for your environment.

Two pieces of equipment, two different jobs

Walk into any aquatic facility and you’ll likely see both: a rescue tube on the guard stand and a ring buoy mounted to the wall or hung at the deck. They look related — both are buoyant, both have a line, both are used to keep someone afloat — but they’re built for different rescues. The decision of which to deploy in any given incident is a judgment call lifeguards train for, and the equipment selection is a decision aquatic directors and pool operators make when stocking a facility.

This article walks through the design differences, the rescue scenarios each tool is suited to, and what most certifying bodies say about which one belongs where.

What a ring buoy is, briefly

A ring buoy — sometimes called a life ring, lifebuoy, or PFD Type IV throwable — is a rigid or semi-rigid annular flotation device, typically 20 to 30 inches in outside diameter, made of foam or kapok with a vinyl skin or fabric cover. A length of buoyant rope (usually 50 to 90 feet) is attached. Ring buoys are designed to be thrown to a victim from shore, dock, or boat, with the line allowing the rescuer to retrieve the victim by pulling on the rope.

The U.S. Coast Guard classifies ring buoys as Type IV personal flotation devices, meant to be thrown rather than worn. They are required equipment on commercial vessels and many recreational boats; the USCG Office of Boating Safety publishes the federal carriage requirements.

What a rescue tube is, briefly

A rescue tube is a longitudinal flotation aid — a long cylindrical or shaped foam body, typically 40 to 50 inches long, with a tow line and shoulder strap. The lifeguard takes the tube into the water, swims to the victim, and uses the tube as a flotation platform that wraps around or supports the victim during the tow back to safety.

Rescue tubes are not classified as PFDs; they are professional rescue equipment. They are referenced as the primary in-water rescue device by the American Red Cross lifeguarding curriculum and required at all Ellis & Associates-audited facilities.

The fundamental difference

A ring buoy is thrown to a conscious, cooperative victim within close range — the victim grabs it and the rescuer pulls them in. A rescue tube is taken into the water by a trained lifeguard and used as both a flotation aid and a control point during an in-water rescue.

Put simpler: ring buoy = land-based assist; rescue tube = in-water rescue.

When to use each

Ring buoy: ideal scenarios

Rescue tube: ideal scenarios

Throw-to vs. swim-to: the key tactical split

Both tools work by getting flotation to a victim, but the path the rescuer takes is opposite. With a ring buoy, the rescuer stays on a stable surface and the equipment travels to the victim. With a rescue tube, the rescuer travels to the victim with the equipment in tow.

Each path has trade-offs:

What lifeguard certifying programs say

Both Red Cross and Ellis & Associates train lifeguards on a tiered response: try the lowest-risk tool first if it’ll work. The general decision tree:

  1. Reach with a pole, shepherd’s crook, or arm if the victim is at the wall.
  2. Throw a ring buoy or rescue tube if the victim is within line range and conscious.
  3. Wade with equipment in shallow water if depth allows.
  4. Swim with a rescue tube as the primary in-water rescue device when the previous options aren’t viable.

The rescue tube isn’t the first choice in every scenario; it’s the right choice for the most common pool and beach scenarios where reach and throw aren’t enough.

Where each belongs in a facility

Most aquatic facilities stock both. Typical placement:

The ring buoy is a passive backup — useful when there’s no guard nearby, in after-hours emergencies, or when bystanders need an option before professional rescue arrives. The rescue tube is the active tool, used by trained personnel as part of an integrated lifeguarding response.

Specifications matter for both

Both pieces of equipment have material and sizing standards. For ring buoys:

For rescue tubes:

Common mistakes

The short version

Use a ring buoy when you can stay out of the water and the victim can grab. Use a rescue tube when a trained lifeguard has to enter the water. Most facilities need both. Neither replaces the other.

ExoTube — closed-cell foam construction

Aquamentor ExoTube

The Aquamentor ExoTube — 50″ closed-cell polyethylene foam, brass hardware, replaceable tow line. Made in the USA, in Garwood NJ since 1983. Bulk pricing for facility orders.

See the 50″ ExoTube on Aquamentor →

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