Tacking and Gybing
Tacking and gybing are the two fundamental course changes in sailing – and in regatta racing they often decide positions, VMG and sometimes the entire race outcome. A clean tack upwind gets you to the next mark faster; a controlled gybe downwind prevents capsizes, sail damage and lost boat lengths. Those who master both manoeuvres communicate clearly with the crew, trim during the manoeuvre and use tactical windows such as lifted tacks or safe gybe lanes.
This guide explains the technical sequences, typical mistakes and regatta-relevant variants – from single-handed dinghies to crewed keelboats. You will find supplementary terminology under Tacking and Gybing.
Tacking and Gybing – the Basics
Tacking means: the boat turns through the wind, the bow crosses the wind direction. Before the manoeuvre you sail upwind (windward), afterwards on the other tack. Gybing (jibe) is the course change downwind: the stern passes through the wind, mainsail and headsail switch sides without the bow going through the wind.
Both manoeuvres cost time and speed – in regatta racing the rule is therefore: as few as necessary, as many as make sense. The decision when to tack or gybe depends on laylines, wind shifts, pressure zones and fleet position. More on course choice and VMG under Courses and VMG.
Boat upwind (Position 1, red tack) → turn through the wind direction → upwind on new tack (Position 2, green tack). Bow crosses the wind line.
Boat downwind → stern crosses the wind line → new downwind sailing on the other tack. Mainsail and headsail switch sides.
When to tack, when to gybe?
On typical windward-leeward courses you tack on the upwind leg at least once per beat, often multiple times for tactical positioning. Gybing is used on the downwind leg – when changing downwind tack, before gates or at gate decisions.
Tacking – Technique and Sequence
A good tack begins long before the command. Helmsman, tactician and trimmers must know course, wind and fleet context. The helmsman plans a smooth turn without abrupt braking; the trimmer prepares sheets and sail shape – details on mainsail and headsail trim are decisive before the manoeuvre.
Standard tack in five phases
- Preparation – „Ready to tack?“ / „Ready?“; crew in position, headsail slightly prepared
- Initiation – „Tacking!“; helmsman begins gentle windward turn
- Through the wind – headsail is sheeted in or led over the head; mainsail stays trimmed until the in-irons moment
- New tack – set headsail on new side, trim mainsail, crew shifts weight
- Acceleration – trim course back to VMG, check telltales, build speed immediately
Important: In the in-irons phase every boat loses speed. The goal is the shortest possible phase with controlled sail handling – not a hectic, uncoordinated turn.
Roll tack – the regatta variant
The roll tack uses crew weight shift to get the boat onto the new tack faster. Typical in dinghies: crew moves dynamically from leeward side to windward and back, hull rolls with it, headsail is set during the roll.
Common tacking mistakes
- Turn too tight → long in-irons phase, large gap to competitors
- Headsail set too early → wrap around the forestay or stall
- Mainsail not trimmed → boat heels to lee or loses speed
- No communication → duplicate actions, tangled sheets
Warning: Tacking under competitors directly to windward of another boat (in-zone tack) can lead to protests. Observe right-of-way and sufficient room – see Basic rules and right-of-way.
Gybing – Technique and Safety
Gybing is the riskier manoeuvre because the boom swings from one side to the other with full force. In gusts and on rough downwind conditions, controlled gybing is essential equipment for every crew. Before gybing: check course, control boom height, warn crew („Stand clear of the boom!“).
Controlled gybe – sequence
- Call – „Gybe ho!“; all crew members confirm readiness
- Bear away – helmsman turns further leeward, wind comes from astern
- Center / pre-gybe – mainsail centred or headsail first, depending on boat and wind
- Boom cross – mainsheet trimmed in under control, boom transferred cleanly
- Trim downwind – new downwind trim, regain VMG course
Tip: In strong wind: reef mainsail slightly before gybing or use vang/backstay for depower. More on this under Reefing and avoidance manoeuvres.
Bear-away set vs. windward gybe
On keelboats with spinnaker or gennaker the manoeuvre is more complex: often bear-away set instead of simple gybing – the boat bears away further, the spinnaker sets, then the gybe follows. Crew roles (pit, mast, trimmer) must work in exact sync.
Crew Communication and Roles
Clean manoeuvres come from clear commands and fixed responsibilities. On larger boats helmsman and tactician work closely together – see Helmsman and tactician.
Typical command chain when tacking:
- Tactician: „Tack in three… two… one… tack!“
- Headsail trimmer: sheets in / leads over
- Main trimmer: holds sheet until Totkalm, then trims
- Helmsman: executes turn, calls „Trim!“ when speed is back
When gybing the sequence is boat-specific – but always: no manoeuvre without crew confirmation.
Checklist: Tacking
- Course and layline scenario chosen deliberately – not reactively
- Competitors and right-of-way checked
- Headsail prepared, sheets clear
- Crew confirms „Ready“
- Smooth turn, short in-irons phase
- New trim immediately after building speed
Checklist: Gybing
- Wind strength and gusts assessed
- Boom zone clear, crew warned
- Depower measures active if needed
- Mainsheet under control
- Check VMG course and trim immediately after gybe
- With spinnaker: set/drop plan coordinated
Tactical Aspects in Regatta Racing
Manoeuvres are never just technique – they are tactical tools. A tack onto a lift (wind shift) immediately gives a better course to the mark. An early tack can enable covering or force an opponent into dirty air. Tacking too late on the layline costs overstand and positions.
Upwind: every tack costs roughly 2–5 boat lengths compared to a boat sailing straight. The tactician plans tacks in pressure zones and avoids them in holes with no benefit.
100% VMG (reference) – typical 420 crew on upwind leg
Approx. 70–85% VMG over 15 seconds – speed loss during the turn
Approx. 80–90% VMG over 10 seconds – faster acceleration after in irons
Up to 50% VMG plus stability risk – boom strike and instability
Training and Improvement
Tacking and gybing are not perfected in a textbook – they need repetition on the water. Recommended practice formats:
- Zigzag upwind: 10 tacks in a row, focus on roll tack and acceleration
- Gybe drills: 5 gybes with increasing wind strength, always with depower plan
- Racing tacks: two boats parallel, tacking under competitive pressure
- No-rudder tacks: weight and sails only – improve feel for balance
Video analysis with onboard camera or coach boat reveals typical time wasters: too long without speed, delayed headsail, wrong centre of gravity. Short training blocks of 20–30 minutes per manoeuvre achieve more than a full day without structure.
Connection to Points of Sail and Trim
Tacking and gybing only work in the context of point of sail and trim. Upwind you need tight trim and fast acceleration after the tack; downwind broader trim and stability after the gybe matter. The differences between upwind and downwind determine which manoeuvre is even possible.
Those who master sail trim basics regain optimal sail shape faster after every manoeuvre – and win back the boat lengths the turn cost.
Frequently asked questions (FAQ)
How many tacks per leg?
Tactically, often 2–6 – depending on laylines, wind shifts and fleet position.
Roll tack always?
In light wind with experienced crew yes – in stronger wind or with inexperienced crew a standard tack is often safer.
Gybing in gusts?
Often avoid or reef – safety and control before VMG.
What does a bad tack cost?
Typically 2–5 boat lengths compared to a boat sailing straight.