Draw It Out® 16oz Liniment Gel
Short answer: Draw It Out® 16oz Liniment Gel is the best first bottle for everyday horse care when you want a ready-to-use, stay-put liniment gel for legs, backs, shoulders, hocks, tack rooms, trailers, and hands-on routines.
Best for
Daily post-ride body care, targeted hands-on application, tack-room shelves, trailer kits, first-time Draw It Out® buyers, and riders who want gel placement instead of spray coverage.
Current options
- 16oz bottle: core daily-use size.
- 4 Pack: routine restock option for barns, families, and multi-horse use.
The best first bottle for everyday horse care. Draw It Out® 16oz Liniment Gel is the ready-to-use, stay-put liniment gel for riders who want a simple daily format for legs, backs, shoulders, hocks, and hands-on recovery routines.
Free shipping at $50+ in the lower 48. Qualifying retail orders ship Free Economy every day. No code needed.
Buy this if
- You want a ready-to-use liniment gel with no mixing required.
- You care for one horse or want a bottle for the tack room, trailer, or show bag.
- You want controlled application that stays where you put it.
- You are trying Draw It Out® for the first time and want the core daily size.
Choose a different format if
- You need a larger ready-to-use size for multiple horses. Choose the 64oz Liniment Gel.
- You want to mix spray bottles, sponge on product, or cover more ground. Choose the 32oz Liniment Concentrate.
- You want fast spray application without mixing. Choose the RTU Spray 24oz.
- You run a barn, training program, or refill station. Choose the 128oz Liniment Concentrate.
Simple buying rule: Gel when you want it to stay where you put it. Concentrate when you want to mix and cover more ground. RTU Spray when speed matters.
How to use
- Start with clean, dry skin.
- Apply a thin, even layer to the desired area.
- Use before or after work as part of your regular horse-care routine.
- Avoid eyes, mucous membranes, and irritated or broken skin unless directed by your veterinarian.
Helpful links
Related buying and routine guides
Safety note: Topical horse care is not a diagnosis. If your horse is lame, hot, swollen, cut, distressed, suddenly off, or worsening, involve your veterinarian or qualified equine professional.