What “Light Tension” Means in Equine Kinesiology Tape (Simple, Real Terms)

What “Light Tension” Means in Equine Kinesiology Tape (Simple, Real Terms)

Real Rider Resource

What “Light Tension” Means in Equine Kinesiology Tape

Light tension is not compression. If your tape fails, it is usually tension, prep, or removal. This guide puts “light tension” into real rider language so your tape holds and your horse stays comfortable.

EQUINE|DEFENDER™ kinesiology tape rolls in multiple colors
Anchors: zero stretch Middle: light stretch Goal: cueing, not compression Rule: nothing under tape

Light tension in one sentence

Light tension means the tape is guiding, not squeezing. You should be able to press a finger into the area and feel normal softness. If it feels tight like a wrap, it is too much.

If you want the full fundamentals, start here: Equine kinesiology tape guide.

Safety rule: avoid open wounds, irritated skin, sunburn, or immediately post injection sites. If you suspect pain or injury, talk to your veterinarian.

The real-world tension scale

You do not need a ruler. You need a repeatable feel. Use this scale as your baseline.

0% tension
Anchors. The first 1 to 2 inches and the last 1 to 2 inches of each strip. Zero stretch keeps edges calm and reduces rub.
Light tension
The middle of the strip. Enough stretch to lay the tape smoothly and create gentle guidance, not enough to feel tight. If you see skin bunching aggressively or the horse reacts, back off.
Too much
Anything that feels like a wrap or pulls the skin hard. This is where edges lift, hair pulls, and irritation starts.

If you are unsure, go lighter. Light tension holds longer and irritates less.

How to know you did it right

Signs your tension is right

  • Edges stay down after the first ride
  • No tight, squeezed look
  • Horse is not reactive to the tape
  • Removal is calm with water-first method

Signs your tension is too much

  • Edges lift early
  • Skin looks pulled or bunched aggressively
  • Horse is itchy or reactive
  • Hair pull during removal

Why prep and placement decide whether tension works

  • Dirty hair: tape lifts. You increase tension to compensate. Then irritation starts.
  • Oils under tape: adhesion fails. You press harder and pull tighter. Then edges rub.
  • High friction zones: the tape gets sheared. Keep patterns simpler and tension lighter.

If you are taping the hock, keep it simple: simple hock taping routine. For the back, start here: back and topline routine.

FAQ

Do I ever use high tension on a horse?
For most rider-applied routines, no. Light tension plus good anchors gives the best hold with the least irritation. If you have a clinical plan from a qualified practitioner, follow their guidance.
Why are anchors always zero stretch?
Anchors stabilize the strip and protect the edges. Zero stretch anchors reduce lift and help prevent rubbing.
Why does my tape lift even when I use light tension?
Usually prep, moisture, or friction. Clean and dry the area, round corners, rub to activate adhesive, and avoid high-friction placements while learning.
When should I not tape?
Avoid open wounds, infected or irritated skin, sunburn, or immediately post injection sites. If your horse is in pain or suddenly lame, talk to your veterinarian.

Where to go next

Build your foundation here: Equine kinesiology tape hub.

Educational only. Not a substitute for veterinary care.

Founder’s Note · Jon Conklin

I write about these topics because they come directly from conversations with real riders. The goal is clarity, fewer assumptions, and better outcomes for the horse.

Further Reading

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