Dive Watch Straps
A dive watch is a tool. The strap is part of that tool — and it needs to perform under the same conditions as the watch itself: saltwater, pressure, temperature extremes, UV exposure, and the physical demands of diving and active water use. A strap that fails in these conditions is worse than no strap at all. CNS Watch Bands produces dive watch straps across five distinct rubber and fabric constructions — FKM rubber, tropical style rubber, HNBR rubber, vented FKM, and the Barracuda velcro diver strap — all built for water and active use. Available at 18mm, 19mm, 20mm, 21mm, 22mm, and 24mm lug widths.
What Makes a Strap a Dive Strap
Not every waterproof strap is a dive strap. The distinction matters:
Water resistance vs dive performance. Ballistic nylon is water-resistant — it handles rain, sweat, and casual splashes without damage. But nylon absorbs a small amount of water under sustained submersion and dries more slowly than rubber. For casual water exposure, nylon is fine. For regular diving, rubber is correct.
Material stability under pressure. Rubber's molecular structure does not change under the pressures encountered in recreational and professional diving. It maintains its shape, flexibility, and surface character at depth in a way that fabric cannot guarantee.
Saltwater and chlorine resistance. FKM fluorocarbon rubber is resistant to seawater, chlorine, UV, and most chemicals — the same class of material used on professional dive watch cases by Omega, Rolex, and Tudor. This is not a marketing claim; it is the reason FKM is the standard material for professional dive applications.
Comfort under a wetsuit. A dive strap needs to be worn over a wetsuit sleeve — which means it needs to be long enough, flexible enough, and secure enough to stay on the wrist under neoprene. The Barracuda velcro strap was designed specifically for this: the hook-and-loop closure adjusts over any sleeve thickness and cannot accidentally undo under a wetsuit cuff.
Dive Watch Straps by Construction
Classic FKM Rubber — the standard dive strap construction. FKM fluorocarbon rubber in a smooth-top, grooved-underside two-piece strap. The most widely used rubber construction for professional dive watches — used as original equipment on Omega Seamaster, Rolex Submariner, and Tudor Pelagos references. Available in over a dozen solid colours including black, navy, grey, blue, green, orange, red, and brown at 20mm and 22mm.
Vented FKM Rubber — the same FKM rubber with ventilation perforations through the strap body. The vented construction reduces heat and moisture accumulation against the skin during extended wear above the waterline — particularly useful for dive watches worn all day between dives. Available in black, navy, orange, yellow, red, green, grey, and brown at 20mm and 22mm.
Tropical Style FKM Rubber — the collector-grade dive strap. CNS spent years sourcing 1960s original tropical rubber straps from watchmakers and used them as molds to produce exact replicas in modern FKM rubber. The result is a strap with the basket-weave or honeycomb surface pattern of vintage dive rubber — historically accurate in texture and profile — built from a modern compound that outperforms any original in water resistance and longevity. The most admired dive strap in the collector community. Available in over fifteen colours at 20mm and 22mm. For the cut-to-size variant with deployant clasp, see the CTS collection.
HNBR Rubber — hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber — a different rubber compound from FKM, offering high flexibility and comfort. HNBR is softer and more supple than FKM, conforming to the wrist more readily and requiring no break-in period. Available in black and green at 20mm.
Waffle Rubber — FKM rubber with a raised waffle-grid surface pattern. The textured top surface reduces contact area with the skin, improving ventilation and comfort during extended wear. Available across a broad colour range including black, navy, blue, green, teal, khaki, orange, red, brown, grey, white, and yellow at 20mm and 22mm.
Barracuda Velcro Diver Strap — the dive-specific velcro construction. Unlike standard velcro straps, the Barracuda is specifically designed for dive watch use — longer than standard to fit over wetsuit sleeves, with a robust hook-and-loop closure that stays fastened under neoprene pressure and adjusts instantly without tools. Available in solid colours and stripe combinations at 18mm, 20mm, and 22mm.
Choosing Your Dive Strap — By Use
Active recreational and professional diving — FKM rubber or HNBR. The most water-resistant and pressure-stable materials. FKM for maximum chemical and UV resistance; HNBR for softer feel and faster comfort conformity.
Over a wetsuit — Barracuda velcro diver strap. The only strap construction that reliably fits over a wetsuit sleeve, adjusts instantly, and cannot accidentally undo during a dive.
Collector dive watches worn as smart-casual daily watches — tropical style FKM. The most historically accurate and most visually admired dive strap. Correct for vintage and heritage dive watches; practical for daily wear.
Dive watches worn in hot climates or for extended active wear — vented FKM or waffle rubber. The ventilation and reduced contact area improve comfort during prolonged wear above the waterline.
Dive watches with a deployant clasp preference — cut-to-size FKM rubber with deployant or the rubber pilot strap with deployant. The fold-over clasp is more secure than a pin buckle and produces a cleaner finished appearance for dive watches worn in smart contexts.
What Watches Suit These Straps
Omega Seamaster Diver 300M — the most widely sold professional dive watch in the world uses 20mm lugs. FKM rubber in black or navy is the factory-spec material. Tropical style black is the collector's choice.
Rolex Submariner — 20mm lugs. FKM rubber in black is period-correct for the dive watch context. Tropical style in black or brown references the vintage Submariner rubber straps of the 1960s and 1970s.
Tudor Black Bay — 20mm lugs. FKM rubber in black or dark brown. Tropical style in brown or black suits the Black Bay's warm heritage aesthetic.
Tudor Pelagos — 22mm lugs. FKM rubber in black or dark grey. The Pelagos's technical dive watch character suits clean black rubber or vented FKM.
Seiko Prospex and SKX series — 20mm lugs. FKM rubber across the full colour range. Seiko dive watches wear bold rubber colourways — orange, blue, and green — particularly well, as the watch cases and bezels are often colour-accented.
Blancpain Fifty Fathoms 45mm — 23mm lugs. FKM rubber in black for active diving; sailcloth for everyday wear. See the dedicated 23mm watch bands page.
IWC Aquatimer — 22mm lugs. FKM rubber in black or dark grey for dive use; sailcloth for everyday nautical wear.
Nylon for Dive Watches — When it's Appropriate
Military nylon single-pass straps are a long-established alternative for recreational diving, particularly among collectors who prefer the historical character of a nylon strap on a vintage or heritage dive watch. The single-pass construction provides spring bar security backup — critical for dive use — and the long length fits over wetsuit sleeves.
Glow-in-the-dark nylon is particularly effective on dive watches for night and low-visibility diving — the full-surface luminescence is a genuine practical benefit rather than a purely aesthetic choice.
For regular saltwater and chlorinated pool diving, rubber remains the more appropriate material. For recreational ocean and lake diving where water exposure is intermittent and the nylon can dry between sessions, military nylon is a practical and historically grounded alternative.
Colour Guide for Dive Straps
Black — the most widely worn and most versatile dive strap colour. Suits all dial colours and case finishes. The factory-spec colour on most professional dive references. Available in FKM, vented, waffle, tropical style, and Barracuda velcro.
Navy — the most nautically appropriate alternative to black. Navy FKM on a blue-dialled Seamaster or Submariner is a cohesive, considered combination. Available in FKM and Barracuda velcro.
Grey — the most understated dive colour. Grey FKM on a dark-dialled dive watch reads as considered without the absolute formality of black. Available in FKM, vented, and waffle.
Orange — the safety colour. Orange is the dive industry's high-visibility colour — on a dive watch, orange rubber is both practical and historically connected to the safety-focused design philosophy of professional dive equipment. Available in FKM, vented, waffle, and tropical style.
Brown and cognac — the collector colours. Tropical style in brown references the aged rubber of vintage 1960s–1970s dive straps — a warm, characterful tone that suits the patina of vintage and heritage dive watches directly. Available in tropical style FKM.
Sizing
Dive watch straps are sized by lug width — the gap in millimetres between the two lugs on your watch case.
| Lug Width | Common Watch Examples |
|---|---|
| 18mm | Smaller vintage dive and sport watches |
| 19mm | Vintage Rolex dive references |
| 20mm | Omega Seamaster, Rolex Submariner, Tudor Black Bay 41, Seiko SKX |
| 21mm | Rolex Oyster Perpetual 36mm |
| 22mm | Tudor Pelagos, IWC Aquatimer, Marathon GSAR |
| 24mm | Panerai Luminor, larger dive references |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best material for a dive watch strap? FKM fluorocarbon rubber is the standard for professional dive watch use — resistant to seawater, chlorine, UV, and the pressure conditions encountered in diving. It is the material used by Omega, Rolex, and Tudor on their professional dive watch references. For wearing over a wetsuit, the Barracuda velcro diver strap provides the most practical fit and the most secure closure.
Can I use a nylon strap for diving? Yes for recreational diving. Single-pass military nylon is water-resistant, long enough to fit over a wetsuit sleeve, and provides spring bar security backup. It dries more slowly than rubber and absorbs a small amount of water under sustained submersion — which is why rubber is preferred for regular and professional diving. For recreational and intermittent diving, nylon is a practical and historically grounded choice.
What size dive strap do I need for an Omega Seamaster? The Omega Seamaster Diver 300M uses 20mm lugs. Order a 20mm dive strap. The Seamaster Planet Ocean also uses 20mm lugs on the 39.5mm and 43.5mm references.
What is a tropical style watch strap? A tropical style strap is an FKM rubber dive strap with a basket-weave or honeycomb surface pattern based on the original rubber straps issued on vintage dive watches in the 1960s and 1970s. CNS sourced original vintage straps and used them as molds to produce exact replicas in modern FKM rubber. The most admired dive strap construction in the collector community — see the dedicated tropical style watch bands page.
What is the Barracuda strap? The Barracuda is a CNS-designed velcro diver strap — longer than a standard velcro strap to accommodate wearing over a wetsuit sleeve, with a robust hook-and-loop closure that stays fastened under neoprene pressure. Available in solid colours and stripe combinations including a Bond-inspired colourway. It is the most practical closure for over-wetsuit wear and one of the most affordable dive straps in the CNS range.