How to wear a weighted vest: Fit your vest for maximum comfort and minimum bounce

How to wear a weighted vest: Fit your vest for maximum comfort and minimum bounce

Quick Summary: How to Wear a Weighted Vest (For Women)

  • Ride High, Not Low: The vest should sit high on your torso, close to your center of gravity. If it hits your hips, it's too low.
  • The Rib Cage Test: Tighten straps enough to stop the bounce, but keep them loose enough to allow full rib cage expansion when breathing.
  • Symmetry is Safety: Always load weights in mirrored pairs (front/back and left/right) to prevent twisting and strain.
  • Women’s Fit Tip: Position the chest strap either above or below the bust line, never directly across, for maximum stability.


You bought the vest, and you're ready to level up your walks, your strength training, maybe even your morning errands. But before you load up and head out the door, there's one thing that will make or break your experience, and that's how it fits. 

If your weighted vest doesn't sit right, bounces, or squeezes your ribs, it can change the way you move, breathe, and hold your posture. You'll have a huge head start if your vest is actually designed for women. After that, getting a great fit only takes about five minutes and is well worth the time. 

Here's how to wear a weighted vest properly so it works with your body, not against it.

Where should a weighted vest sit?

Your vest should sit high on your torso, close to your center of mass. That means the weight is distributed evenly across your front and back, left and right, so you're not tipping forward or twisting to compensate. If you're short, this can be especially tricky unless you have a vest specifically designed for women.

When the weight stays close to your trunk, your spine stays neutral and your muscles can do their job without fighting gravity in the wrong direction.

If the bottom of the vest bumps against your hips when you walk, or if you feel it tugging on your lower back, it's sitting too low. Raise it up, then adjust from there.

Proper technique for putting on a weighted vest

Here's a step-by-step that will help you get the fit just right:

Put it on empty (or very light). Loosen all straps and center the vest on your torso so that it's resting high and not hanging off your shoulders or drooping toward your waist.

Adjust the shoulder straps first. Tighten them until the vest feels hugged to your upper body. If it pulls your shoulders forward or presses into the base of your neck, it's too tight up top or positioned too low.

Close the front buckle and fine-tune. Aim for a stable feeling, not compression. The vest should feel secure enough that it doesn't shift when you move, but loose enough that you can breathe fully.

Do a breathing check. Inhale deeply into your ribs (not just your belly). If you can't fully expand or if your breaths feel short or restricted, loosen up and reposition. If the vest restricts your breathing, it'll limit your performance and make everything feel harder than it needs to.

Walk-test for 60 to 90 seconds. Walk at your normal pace and pay attention to how the vest responds. You're looking for minimal bounce without any forward lean, and no pressure points on your collarbones, ribs, or traps. If something feels off, fix the fit before adjusting the weight.

How much weight to wear in a weighted vest

When you add weight, always add it in matched pairs on the left and right, front and back, which helps keeps your body balanced and prevents one side from working harder than the other. 

The YVO Warrior Vest holds up to 20lb using eight modular 2.5lb pouches that slide into zippered pockets, four in the front (two left, two right) and four in the back. Most research on weighted vest walking uses loads at or under roughly 10% of body weight as a starting point (start lower if you have medical conditions like pelvic organ prolapse or are postpartum). We recommend starting lighter so the vest sits snug and stable, then building gradually.

Here's where you can start:

  • 7.5lb: 1 pouch in each front pocket + 1 in the back
  • 10lb: 1 pouch in each front pocket + 2 in the back
  • 12.5lb: 2 pouches in each front pocket + 1 in the back
  • 15lb and up: Continue adding pouches to the back as needed

One thing many people miss is that the YVO shoulder straps have a built-in slider system that adjusts up and down. Always secure the front buckle first, then fine-tune the slider until the vest sits high and close.

Every time you change the load, run through those three checks again by taking a deep breath, making sure you can freely swing your arms, and the short walk test.

Fitting tips for women 

Most weighted vests were designed with men in mind. Women's bodies are different, and your fitting approach should reflect that.

Place the chest buckle above or below the fullest part of your bust. You want the buckle to stabilize the vest without compressing breast tissue. For many women, that means positioning the strap across the upper sternum or across the lower ribcage, then re-checking your deep breath.

Don't over-tighten for stability. If you're cinching the vest down to keep it from moving, you'll usually end up trading stability for restricted breathing and chafing. Use positioning and even weight distribution instead.

For shorter torsos, go high and snug. A vest that sits too low can bump your hips, tug your lower back, and make you feel top-heavy, especially on hills or stairs. Try raising the vest position, then tighten it up until it's snug, but not too tight.

What to wear under a weighted vest

Don't underestimate a good base layer. A smooth, supportive sports bra can cut back on friction under the straps and along your sides, especially if you're wearing a vest for a long time. If you're getting rubbing or irritation, it's usually the combination of fabric texture and repetitive movement, not your body.

Fabrics that wick moisture (like polyester, nylon, bamboo) with flat seams are key for avoiding chafing and feeling sticky. A sports bra with a smooth front and a fitted tank or tee are usually your best bet.

You're ready for a weighted walk!

A weighted vest is one of the simplest and most effective tools you can add to your movement routine. But how you wear it matters just as much as whether you wear it. Take five minutes to get your fit right, load your weight evenly, and listen to what your body tells you. When the vest feels like part of you, and is stable, balanced, comfortable, then you're ready to go.

View Sources & References

References:

  1. Gaffney, K. D., et al. (2021). "Weighted vests in CrossFit increase physiological stress during walking and running without changes in spatiotemporal gait parameters." Sports Biomechanics.
  2. Looney, D. P., et al. (2024). "Effect of Vest Load Carriage on Cardiometabolic Responses with Load Position, Load Mass, and Walking Conditions." Bioengineering.
  3. Miller, J., et al. (2021). "Thoracic load carriage and respiratory mechanics." Journal of Applied Physiology.
  4. Beavers, K. M., et al. (2025). "INVEST in Bone Health: Weighted Vest Use during Dietary Weight Loss in Older Adults." Wake Forest University Clinical Trial Results.
  5. Normandin, E., et al. (2018). "Feasibility of Weighted Vest Use during a Dietary Weight Loss Intervention and Effects on Body Composition." Journal of Fragility Aging.
  6. Maula, H., et al. (2024). "Sports Bra Restriction on Respiratory Mechanics during Exercise." Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
  7. Paniak, et al. (2025). "Assessing the Impact of Wearing a Weighted Vest on Balance, Stability, and Quality of Life in Older Adults." Health Science Reports.
Rachel MacPherson CSCS

About the Author

Rachel MacPherson, CSCS, CPT

Rachel is a certified strength and conditioning specialist with over a decade of experience. She specializes in helping women build strength and confidence through evidence based training.

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes. Always consult a healthcare professional before starting a new exercise routine.

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