WaterSafetyonVacation:HowtoKeepYourChildSafeinOpenWater,inAnyCountry[2026]
![Water Safety on Vacation: How to Keep Your Child Safe in Open Water, in Any Country [2026]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fzvblogpostimages.s3.eu-west-3.amazonaws.com%2FAUTOMATISCH_UPLOAD%2F1_780f0a54801b.jpg&w=3840&q=75&dpl=dpl_FJwcKYU1WneRMMovk4KpoLXjy37E)
Summary
- Worldwide, 300,000 people drown annually -- 43% are children under 15; vacation periods are the riskiest due to unfamiliar water and less supervision
- Open water (sea, lake, river) is fundamentally different from a swimming pool: currents, temperature, visibility, and depth are unpredictable -- even for children with a swimming diploma
- Dutch children are on average good swimmers, but 14% of 6-12 year olds have no diploma; safety standards vary greatly in vacation countries
- Five concrete preparations make the difference: know local flags, bring approved flotation aids, set water rules, teach your child to recognize dangers, and know what to do in emergencies
TLDR
- Worldwide, 300,000 people drown annually -- 43% are children under 15; vacation periods are the riskiest due to unfamiliar water and less supervision
- Open water (sea, lake, river) is fundamentally different from a swimming pool: currents, temperature, visibility, and depth are unpredictable -- even for children with a swimming diploma
- Dutch children are on average good swimmers, but 14% of 6-12 year olds have no diploma; safety standards and warning systems can vary greatly in vacation countries
- Five concrete preparations make the difference: know local flags and warnings, bring approved flotation aids, set clear water rules, teach your child to recognize dangers, and know what to do in emergencies
Why Open Water on Vacation Is Extra Dangerous
You know the feeling: you check into your holiday home, the kids immediately run to the pool or beach, and you try to unpack the suitcases. On vacation, routines relax -- and thatâs when most water accidents happen. The WHO reports that drowning is the fourth leading cause of death worldwide for children under 15, with 130,000 victims in 2021 alone.
The problem isnât that children canât swim. The problem is that open water -- sea, lake, river -- is fundamentally different from the familiar pool where your child takes weekly lessons. Currents pull legs unexpectedly. The bottom slopes steeply without warning. The water is colder, murkier, and you canât see the bottom. Even children with A, B, and C diplomas can get into trouble in open water simply because they donât recognize the dangers.
The Netherlands is a global leader in swimming safety, but that doesnât mean Dutch children are automatically safe in the Mediterranean Sea or a French mountain river. The Mulier Institute reports that 14% of children aged 6-12 have no swimming diploma. And even children with all three diplomas rarely have experience with open water -- swimming lessons take place in a controlled indoor pool.
The Five Biggest Dangers of Open Water (That Your Child Doesnât Know)
1. Currents and Undertows
In a pool, the water is still. In the sea, rivers, and even some lakes, there are currents -- sometimes visible, often invisible. A rip current at the sea can pull a child tens of meters away from the shore within a minute. Rivers have undertows near bridges and narrow spots. Teach your child: if you get pulled by a current, swim parallel to the shore, not against it.
2. Unexpected Depth Changes
A pool has marked deep and shallow areas. Open water does not. One step youâre knee-deep, the next the bottom disappears. This especially applies to lakes with steep banks and beaches with sandbanks. Teach your child never to jump in anywhere without first feeling how deep it is.
3. Cold Shock and Temperature Differences
Open water is often significantly colder than pool water (28-30 degrees Celsius). The North Sea averages 17-18 degrees in summer; mountain lakes can be even colder. A sudden plunge into cold water causes a shock reaction: your breathing speeds up, your heart rate spikes, and your muscles cramp. This happens to adults too -- for children, the risk is greater.
4. Poor Visibility and Hidden Objects
In murky water, you canât see what lies beneath the surface: rocks, tree trunks, glass, or sharp shells. An innocent dive can end with a head injury. Teach your child that "look first, then jump" in open water means: always have an adult check first.
5. Fatigue from Waves and Distance
In a pool, a child can rest at the edge after each lap. In open water, the distance to shore is often much greater than it seems. Waves cost extra energy. A child who can easily swim 50 meters in a pool may be exhausted after 20 meters in the sea due to the combination of waves, current, cold, and fear.
Flags, Signs, and Warnings: What They Mean in Different Countries
Dutch beaches use a clear flag system: red-yellow means safe with lifeguard supervision, red means dangerous and swimming is discouraged. But in other countries, warning systems can be slightly different:
- Spain, Italy, Greece: green flag = safe, yellow flag = caution (children only with direct supervision), red flag = swimming prohibited. A blue flag means the beach meets environmental standards -- nothing to do with safety.
- France: uses, besides standard flags, a purple flag for dangerous marine life (jellyfish, stinging hydroids). The "drapeau vert" means the water is suitable for swimming. Lifeguards have whistles -- pay attention to whistle signals.
- Australia: the strictest flag system in the world. Swim only between the red-yellow flags -- outside is life-threatening. This is actively enforced. Blue flags mark surf zones.
A universal rule: if you donât see flags or signs at natural water, there is probably no supervision -- and thus no help nearby if something goes wrong.
What to Bring: The Water Safety Checklist for Vacation
Approved Flotation Aids
Not all inflatable armbands and swim vests are safe. Choose CE-approved life jackets with the EN 13138 certification for flotation aids. Note: inflatable armbands and water wings are toys -- they do not prevent drowning. The National Council for Swimming Safety emphasizes that adult supervision remains the most important safety measure, regardless of which aids you use.
The Physical Checklist
- An approved life jacket per child (no inflatable armbands as sole protection)
- Waterproof phone case -- to always call 112 without your phone getting wet
- High-factor sunscreen (water reflects UV rays, you burn faster)
- A whistle on a cord -- your child can whistle for help if they canât shout
- Water and snacks -- dehydration and low blood sugar make children tire faster in the water
- Swim shoes against sharp stones, shells, and sea urchins
How to Talk to Your Child About Water Safety Without Causing Fear
The goal is not to make your child afraid of water. The goal is to make your child aware of the differences between the pool and open water, and give them the tools to recognize dangers themselves. Make it a game: "Who spots the flags on the beach first? What color are they? What does that mean?" or "How many steps can you take before the water reaches your hips? And now your shoulders?"
Teach your child three basic rules they can always remember, in any language, in any country:
- Never go into the water alone. Not even if you have a swimming diploma. Always have an adult nearby who is actively watching.
- Always check first. How deep is it? Are there rocks? Is there current? What do the flags say? Only then enter the water.
- If youâre tired, get out. In open water, the shore is always farther than you think. Swim back before you get tired, not after.
What to Do in an Emergency: The First Minutes Are Crucial
In a water accident, every second counts. Hereâs what you need to know, in every situation, in every country:
- Call for help immediately. In Europe, 112 works everywhere, even without your own providerâs signal. In the US and Canada, itâs 911. Save these numbers in your phone and teach them to your child.
- Get the child out of the water without putting yourself in danger -- a second victim only makes the situation worse. Use a stick, towel, or branch to pull the child to shore.
- Check consciousness and breathing. If the child isnât breathing, start CPR immediately (30 chest compressions, 2 breaths) and have someone else call 112. Continue CPR until emergency services arrive.
- Even after a near-drowning, see a doctor. Water in the lungs can cause serious complications hours later (secondary drowning). Symptoms: persistent coughing, rapid breathing, drowsiness, blue lips. When in doubt, always seek medical help.
The Red Cross recommends all parents take a first aid course -- the basic resuscitation you learn is the same for drowning as for other emergencies.
International Water Safety: Why This Is Relevant in Every Country
The Netherlands is a water country -- with 523 kilometers of coastline and thousands of lakes and rivers, Dutch children grow up with water. But Dutch parents sometimes donât realize that the safety standards weâre used to -- lifeguards on every beach, clear flags, school swimming -- are missing in many vacation countries.
The CDC reports that 90% of drownings occur in low- and middle-income countries, precisely the regions where supervision, warning systems, and rescue services are least developed. This makes it all the more important that parents take responsibility for their childrenâs water safety themselves -- regardless of local facilities.
The principles of water safety are universal, whether youâre at the Dutch coast or a lake in Thailand: active supervision, knowledge of local dangers, approved aids, and knowing what to do in emergencies. Swimmigo is built with that universal principle in mind -- available in 5 languages, so parents and instructors worldwide have the same clear progress information.
How Swimmigo Helps with Water Safety on Vacation
One of Swimmigoâs most practical features for vacations is the vacation mode. Parents can check off exercises their child does outside of swimming lessons -- for example, in the holiday pool or at the sea. The swim instructor sees exactly what the child has practiced and can seamlessly continue lesson progression after the vacation. This prevents skills from fading during the long summer break, which directly benefits water safety.
Conclusion
Water safety on vacation doesnât start at the beach -- it starts at home, with a good conversation and a well-packed bag. Teach your child the three basic rules (never alone, always check, get out on time), bring approved flotation aids, and know how local warning systems work. Fifteen minutes of preparation can make the difference between a carefree holiday day and an accident that stays with you forever.
Also Discover
- Swimmigo for parents: follow your childâs swimming lesson progress
- The 7 swimming levels and 86 skills
- All features of Swimmigo at a glance
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
- WHO: Global status report on drowning prevention 2024 -- December 2024
- CDC: Global Drowning Prevention -- 2024
- Red Cross: First Aid Tips for Water Accidents -- 2024
- NRZ: Netherlands Global Leader in Swimming Safety -- 2019
- Mulier Institute: More Children Obtain All Three Swimming Diplomas -- 2025
- Swimmigo: Free Swimming Lesson Progress and Planning Worldwide -- 2026
Bob van Soest
As an expert in operating sports facilities (such as swimming pools) and developer of, among others, Swimmigo.com, I am passionately committed to making swimming lessons simpler, more fun and more insightful for parents, swimming instructors and everyone who wants to learn to swim.
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