How to Pass Restrictions in Sidemount
One of the Biggest Advantages of Sidemount
Sidemount is often associated with cave diving for one reason above all others: Restrictions.
The ability to remove cylinders, reduce profile, and move through spaces that would be difficult or impossible in backmount is one of the defining advantages of sidemount diving.
But passing restrictions is not about squeezing through tight spaces recklessly.
It’s about:
- control
- efficiency
- positioning
- and decision-making
When done correctly, restriction handling feels calm and methodical.
When done poorly, it quickly becomes unstable, silty, and dangerous.
First: Not Every Restriction Should Be Passed
The Goal Is Not “Fitting Through”
Proper Positioning Before the Restriction
When to Remove a Cylinder
Removing a Cylinder Properly
Body Position Matters More Than Strength
Movement Should Be Slow and Deliberate
Managing the Mental Side of Restrictions
Team Awareness in Restrictions
Restrictions Should Not Feel Chaotic
Final Thought
First: Not Every Restriction Should Be Passed
This is the most important point in the entire discussion. Just because a restriction can be passed does not mean it should be.
A diver should consider:
- visibility
- flow
- line placement
- equipment complexity
- gas management
- stress level
- team capability
- familiarity with the cave
- preserving the cave
- and exit conditions
Some restrictions become significantly more difficult on exit.
Especially after:
- silting
- fatigue
- gas depletion
- or increased task loading
Good judgment matters more than physical capability.
The Goal Is Not “Fitting Through”
A common mistake is focusing only on body size or cylinder clearance.
But restrictions are really about maintaining:
- control
- awareness
- and the ability to reverse the process safely
A diver forcing through a restriction while losing trim, silting heavily, or becoming task-loaded is not “handling” the restriction well. They are surviving it poorly. They are damaging the cave.
The goal is smooth movement with minimal disturbance.
Proper Positioning Before the Restriction
Long before reaching the restriction, the diver should already be:
- stable in trim
- streamlined
- calm
- and thinking ahead
Rushed decisions inside restrictions create problems. A good setup helps enormously here. Loose equipment, unstable cylinders, dangling accessories, or poor trim become magnified in tight spaces. This is one reason clean sidemount configuration matters so much.
When to Remove a Cylinder
Not every restriction requires removing cylinders.
Sometimes:
- proper body positioning
- rotating slightly
- or adjusting cylinder angle
is enough.
Cylinder removal should happen because it improves control, not simply because the space looks tight. Unnecessary cylinder removal increases task loading and complexity.
Removing a Cylinder Properly
When cylinder removal becomes necessary, the process should remain slow and deliberate.
The diver should:
- Maintain awareness of the guideline
- Avoid abrupt movements
- Keep cylinders controlled and close
- Prevent contact with the cave floor or ceiling
The cylinder should never become an uncontrolled object being pushed ahead randomly. In many caves, this is where visibility problems begin.
Body Position Matters More Than Strength
Good restriction divers are usually not forcing themselves through spaces with power.
They are using:
- positioning
- balance
- and precision
Small changes in:
- shoulder angle
- cylinder orientation
- head position
- and body posture
often make enormous differences.
This is another reason horizontal trim matters so much in sidemount. Poor trim creates unnecessary height and instability.
Movement Should Be Slow and Deliberate
Fast movement creates:
- silt
- instability
- line contact
- damage to the cave
- and poor decision-making
The tighter the environment becomes, the more valuable slow movement becomes. Many restriction problems begin because divers try to “push through” quickly instead of methodically managing the space. Smooth movement usually creates fewer problems than aggressive movement.
Managing the Mental Side of Restrictions
Restrictions affect divers psychologically as much as physically.
Stress changes:
- breathing
- buoyancy
- body tension
- and awareness
This is why comfort in restrictions comes from repetition and experience, not ego. A calm diver usually moves more efficiently than a tense diver. And a diver who feels rushed often creates their own problems.
Team Awareness in Restrictions
Restrictions can separate divers physically and visually. That changes communication and problem-solving.
Good teams think ahead about:
- order of passage
- cylinder handling
- visibility impact
- and contingency planning
In silty environments, one poorly managed restriction can affect everyone behind the lead diver. This is especially problematic on the way out of the cave.
Restrictions Should Not Feel Chaotic
One of the clearest signs that a restriction exceeds a diver’s current ability is chaos.
If passing a restriction consistently involves:
- major silting
- loss of trim
- uncontrolled movement
- damage to the cave
- or high stress
then something is wrong.
Either:
- the technique needs improvement
- the setup needs refinement
- or the restriction is inappropriate for the diver’s current level
The restriction may not be suitable for penetration. If that’s the case, don’t force it.
Final Thought
The best restriction divers often look almost boring underwater.
No rushing.
No forcing.
No dramatic movement.
Just controlled positioning and deliberate movement through the environment.
That’s what good sidemount restriction handling actually looks like, because restrictions are not about proving you can fit somewhere. They’re about proving you can move through difficult environments with minimal contact with the cave while remaining controlled enough to come back out safely.
If you found this article helpful, you can receive $10 off the book Sidemount Diving when purchasing directly from the website.
Use code RESTRICTION10 during checkout.
Related Articles
How to Properly Trim Out in Sidemount
Proper Sidemount Cylinder Rigging: What Matters Most
Why You Can’t Stay Horizontal in Sidemount (And How to Fix It)
Why Your Sidemount Cylinders Are Floating (And What It Means)

